HNF1B Mutations Are Associated With a Gitelman-like Tubulopathy That Develops During Childhood
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Abstract
Background: Mutations in the transcription factor hepatocyte nuclear factor 1B (HNF1B) are the most
common inherited cause of renal malformations, yet also associated with renal tubular dysfunction, most
prominently magnesium wasting with hypomagnesemia. The presence of hypomagnesemia has been
proposed to help select appropriate patients for genetic testing. Yet, in a large cohort, hypomagnesemia
was discriminatory only in adult, but not in pediatric patients. We therefore investigated whether hypomagnesemia and other biochemical changes develop with age.
Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of clinical, biochemical, and genetic results of pediatric
patients with renal malformations tested for HNF1B mutations, separated into 4 age groups. Values were
excluded if concurrent estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was <30 ml/min per 1.73 m2
, or after
transplantation.
Results: A total of 199 patients underwent HNF1B genetic testing and mutations were identified in 52
(mutþ). The eGFRs were comparable between mutþ and mut in any age group. Although median
plasma magnesium concentrations differed significantly between mutþ and mut patients in all age
groups, overt hypomagnesemia was not present until the second half of childhood in the mutþ group.
There was also a significant difference in median potassium concentrations in late childhood with lower
values in the mutþ cohort.
Conclusions: The abnormal tubular electrolyte handling associated with HNF1B mutations develops with
age and is not restricted to magnesium, but consistent with a more generalized dysfunction of the distal
convoluted tubule, reminiscent of Gitelman syndrome. The absence of these abnormalities in early
childhood should not preclude HNF1B mutations from diagnostic considerations