| Literature DB >> 26245874 |
Javier Batlle1, Almudena Pérez-Rodríguez, Irene Corrales, Maria Fernanda López-Fernández, Ángela Rodríguez-Trillo, Esther Lourés, Ana Rosa Cid, Santiago Bonanad, Noelia Cabrera, Andrés Moret, Rafael Parra, María Eva Mingot-Castellano, Ignacia Balda, Carmen Altisent, Rocío Pérez-Montes, Rosa María Fisac, Gemma Iruín, Sonia Herrero, Inmaculada Soto, Beatriz de Rueda, Victor Jiménez-Yuste, Nieves Alonso, Dolores Vilariño, Olga Arija, Rosa Campos, María José Paloma, Nuria Bermejo, Teresa Toll, José Mateo, Karmele Arribalzaga, Pascual Marco, Ángeles Palomo, Lizheidy Sarmiento, Belén Iñigo, María del Mar Nieto, Rosa Vidal, María Paz Martínez, Reyes Aguinaco, Jesús María César, María Ferreiro, Javier García-Frade, Ana María Rodríguez-Huerta, Jorge Cuesta, Ramón Rodríguez-González, Faustino García-Candel, Rosa Cornudella, Carlos Aguilar, Nina Borràs, Francisco Vidal.
Abstract
The diagnosis of von Willebrand disease (VWD) remains difficult in a significant proportion of patients. A Spanish multicentre study investigated a cohort of 556 patients from 330 families who were analysed centrally. VWD was confirmed in 480. Next generation sequencing (NGS) of the whole coding VWF was carried out in all recruited patients, compared with the phenotype, and a final diagnosis established. A total of 238 different VWF mutations were found, 154 were not included in the Leiden Open Variation Database (LOVD). Of the patients, 463 were found to have VWF mutation/s. A good phenotypic/genotypic association was estimated in 96.5% of the patients. One hundred seventy-four patients had two or more mutations. Occasionally a predominant phenotype masked the presence of a second abnormality. One hundred sixteen patients presented with mutations that had previously been associated with increased von Willebrand factor (VWF) clearance. RIPA unavailability, central phenotypic results disagreement and difficult distinction between severe type 1 and type 3 VWD prevented a clear diagnosis in 70 patients. The NGS study facilitated an appropriate classification in 63 of them. The remaining seven patients presented with a VWF novel mutation pending further investigation. In five patients with a type 3 and two with a type 2A or 2B phenotype with no mutation, an acquired von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS) was suspected/confirmed. These data seem to support NGS as a first line efficient and faster paradigm in VWD diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: NGS; VWD; VWF; genotype; phenotype
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26245874 DOI: 10.1160/TH15-04-0282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb Haemost ISSN: 0340-6245 Impact factor: 5.249