| Literature DB >> 31249973 |
Oliver Andres1, Eva-Maria König2, Karina Althaus3,4, Tamam Bakchoul3,4, Peter Bugert5, Stefan Eber6, Ralf Knöfler7, Erdmute Kunstmann2, Georgi Manukjan8, Oliver Meyer9, Gabriele Strauß10, Werner Streif11, Thomas Thiele4, Verena Wiegering1, Eva Klopocki2, Harald Schulze8.
Abstract
Inherited platelet disorders (IPD) form a rare and heterogeneous disease entity that is present in about 8% of patients with non-acquired bleeding diathesis. Identification of the defective cellular pathway is an important criterion for stratifying the patient's individual risk profile and for choosing personalized therapeutic options. While costs of high-throughput sequencing technologies have rapidly declined over the last decade, molecular genetic diagnosis of bleeding and platelet disorders is getting more and more suitable within the diagnostic algorithms. In this study, we developed, verified, and evaluated a targeted, panel-based next-generation sequencing approach comprising 59 genes associated with IPD for a cohort of 38 patients with a history of recurrent bleeding episodes and functionally suspected, but so far genetically undefined IPD. DNA samples from five patients with genetically defined IPD with disease-causing variants in WAS , RBM8A , FERMT3 , P2YR12 , and MYH9 served as controls during the validation process. In 40% of 35 patients analyzed, we were able to finally detect 15 variants, eight of which were novel, in 11 genes, ACTN1 , AP3B1 , GFI1B , HPS1 , HPS4 , HPS6 , MPL , MYH9 , TBXA2R , TPM4 , and TUBB1 , and classified them according to current guidelines. Apart from seven variants of uncertain significance in 11% of patients, nine variants were classified as likely pathogenic or pathogenic providing a molecular diagnosis for 26% of patients. This report also emphasizes on potentials and pitfalls of this tool and prospectively proposes its rational implementation within the diagnostic algorithms of IPD.Entities:
Keywords: molecular genetics; next-generation sequencing; platelet function disorder; thrombocytopathy; thrombocytopenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 31249973 PMCID: PMC6524924 DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1676813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: TH Open ISSN: 2512-9465
Patient characteristics and detected variants classified as classes 3–5 after phase 1 variant assessment (in order of inclusion date)
| Case | Age | Sex | Suspected diagnosis and/or referral due to |
Platelet count
| Main findings of platelet analysis | Gene |
Status
| Detected variant | Segregation | In silico prediction | Reference |
Variant class
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 17 y | m | Suspected HPS; albinism; prolonged traumatic bleeding | 210 | Abnormal LTA (COL, EPI), CD63 and mepacrine assay (FC) |
| hom | c.1919_1920delTC, p.V640Gfs*29 | Yes | – |
| 4 |
| 2 | 20 mo | m | Familial thrombocytopenia; mucocutaneous bleedings | 54 | d. n. a. |
| het | c.127C>G, p.R43G | No | M, S, P | – | 2 |
| 3 | 11 y | f | Recurrent epistaxis; hematomas; menorrhagia | 171 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, EPI, ristocetin), ADP response (FC) | |||||||
| 4 | 3 y | m | Severe familial thrombocytopenia and bleeding episodes | 3 | d. n. a. | |||||||
| 5 | 9 y | f | Severe thrombocytopenia since the age of 2 mo; ITP treatment failure | 7 | d. n. a. | |||||||
| 6 | 15 mo | m | Suspected ADP receptor defect; menorrhagia; epistaxis | n. a. | Reduced ADP response (LTA, FC) | |||||||
| 7 | 4 y | f | Suspected Bernard–Soulier syndrome; thrombocytopenia | n. a. | d. n. a. |
| het | c.1019C>T, p.T340M | n. d. | M, S, P | – | 3 |
| 8 | 14 y | m | Suspected ADP receptor defect; joint hemorrhage | 230 | Abnormal ADP response (LTA, FC), LTA (EPI) | |||||||
| 9 | 66 y | f |
Macrothrombocytopenia; suspected
| 85 | Reduced CD62P expression upon TRAP6 (FC) |
| het | c.128–129AG>CC, p.Q43P | n. d. | E, M, S, P |
|
2
|
| 10 | 10 y | f | Suspected HPS; albinism; recurrent epistaxis | 375 | LTA as aspirin-like defect; delta-granule deficiency (FC) |
| hom | c.1714–1G>A (loss of splice acceptor) | Yes | – | 5 | |
| 11 | 17 y | m | Thrombocytopenia with skeletal abnormalities | 102 | d. n. a. | |||||||
| 12 | 14 y | f | Suspected HPS | n. a. | No response upon ADP, TRAP6 (LTA, FC) |
| hom | c.1790delT, p.I597Nfs*3 | n. d. | – |
| 4 |
| 13 | 13 y | m | Suspected thrombocytopathy; hematomas and petechiae | 218 | Abnormal LTA (ADP) | |||||||
| 14 | 18 y | m | Familial, autosomal dominant thrombocytopenia | 115 | d. n. a. |
| het | c.3250_3252delGAG, p.E1084del | n. d. | M |
HGMD
| 4 |
| 15 | 14 mo | f | Suspected Glanzmann thrombasthenia | 183 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, COL); reduced GPIIb/IIIa expression (FC) | |||||||
| 16 | 10 y | m | Mild familial thrombocytopenia | 127 | d. n. a. |
| het | c.343_345delTTC, p.F115del | n. d. | E, M | – | 3 |
| 17 | 18 y | f | Suspected aspirin-like defect; menorrhagia | 160 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, AA, U46619) | |||||||
| 18 | 12 y | f | Suspected aspirin-like defect | 220 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, AA, U46619) | |||||||
| 19 | 13 y | f | Menorrhagia | 348 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, COL, EPI) | |||||||
| 20 | 17 y | f | Menorrhagia; hematomas; repetitive postoperative bleeding | 363 | Giant platelets; abnormal LM (thrombin, COL) | |||||||
| 21 | 12 y | m | Familial thrombocytopenia | 24 | d. n. a. | |||||||
| 22 | 3 y | m | Familial thrombocytopenia | 123 | Abnormal IF (cytoskeleton, α-/dense-granules) | |||||||
| 23 | 2 y | m | Familial thrombocytopenia | 65 | Absent thrombospondin in α-granules (IF) | |||||||
| 24 | 36 y | f | Severe familial macrothrombocytopenia; platelet function defect |
119
| Abnormal platelet function (LTA), CD34 expression (IF) |
| hom | c.551insG, p.S185Lfs*3 | Yes | – |
| 4 |
| 25 | 24 y | f | Suspected HPS; albinism | 194 | Reduced ATP release (COL, EPI), dense-granule content (IF) |
|
het
| c.598G>T, p.E200* | n. d. | – | – |
3
|
|
|
het
| c.972insC, p.M325Hfs*128 | n. d. | E |
ClinVar; HGMD
|
3
| ||||||
| 26 | 32 y | f | Suspected GPVI defect; hypermenorrhea; skin bleedings | 280 | Abnormal LTA (COL, CVX); reduced response upon CVX (FC) | |||||||
| 27 | 22 y | f | Familial macrothrombocytopenia; menorrhagia | 99 | Giant platelets |
| het | c.136C>T, p.R46W | Yes | E, M, S, P |
HGMD
| 4 |
| 28 | 8 y | f | Macrothrombocytopenia | 64 | d. n. a. | |||||||
| 29 | 1 mo | n. a. |
Suspected
| 83 | d. n. a. |
| het | c.3464C>T, p.T1155I | n. d. | M, S, P |
ClinVar; HGMD
| 5 |
| 30 | 25 y | f | Familial thrombocytopenia | 113 | Abnormal myosin clustering (IF) | |||||||
| 31 | 66 y | m | Familial macrothrombocytopenia | 85 | Abnormal tubulin distribution (IF) |
| hom | c.326G>A; p.G109E | Yes | E, M, S, P |
HGMD
| 4 |
| 32 | 8 y | f | Familial thrombocytopenia; skin bleedings after mosquito bites | 61 | Unclear CD34 expression (IF) |
| het | c.581G>A; p.C194Y | Pat | M, S, P | – | 3 |
|
| het | c.385delG; p.V129* | Pat | M | – | 3 | ||||||
|
| het | c.6047A>G; p.K2016T | Mat | M, S, P | – | 2 | ||||||
| 33 | 36 y | f | Familial thrombocytopenia; delta-storage pool deficiency | 85 | Abnormal LTA (ADP, COL, AA), ATP release (LM) | |||||||
| 34 | 41 y | f | Familial thrombocytopenia | 88 | Abnormal LTA (AA, ADP, COL, ristocetin) | |||||||
| 35 | 62 y | m | Thrombocytopenia since the age of 35 y; ITP treatment failure | 26 | Giant platelets | |||||||
| 36 | 7 mo | f | Suspected CAMT type II; mucocutaneous bleeding diathesis | <10 | n. d. a. |
| hom | c.769C>T; p.R257C | Yes | E, M, S, P |
ClinVar; HGMD
| 5 |
| 37 | 11 y | m | Hematomas; delta-storage pool deficiency | 406 | Abnormal LTA (COL); reduced ATP and ADP release (LM) | |||||||
| 38 | 11 y | f | Familial recurrent epistaxis; delta-storage pool deficiency | 218 | Reduced ATP and ADP release (LM) |
Abbreviations: AA, arachidonic acid; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; CAMT, congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia; COL, collagen; CVX, convulxin; d. n. a., details not available; E, ExAC; EPI, epinephrine; f, female; FC, flow cytometry; GP, glycoprotein; het, heterozygous; hom, homozygous; IF, immunofluorescence; HPS, Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome; ITP, immune thrombocytopenia; LM, luminometry; LTA, light transmission aggregometry; M, MntTaster; m, male; mat, maternal; n. a., not available; n. d., not done; P, Poly-phen 2; pat, paternal; S, SIFT.
(× 10 9 /L).
Allele frequency for heterozygous cut-off: 40–60% of the reads.
After phase 2 variant assessment.
The TUBB1 Q43P variant is not pathogenic on its own, but known to be a modifier of platelet function.
Under eltrombopag.
Trans -position of heterozygous variants not yet proven, thus, preliminary classification of variants into class 3.
Fig. 1Flow chart of analysis procedure and variant assessment. DNA samples of 43 individuals were processed by targeted, panel-based next-generation sequencing (absolute number of patients). In the group of patients with unknown platelet defect, variants were initially classified using in silico filtering programs and gene databases (phase 1 variant assessment). In a second step, class 3 variants (variants of uncertain significance) were assessed with respect to clinical phenotype, segregation analysis, literature, in vitro data, and animal models (phase 2 variant assessment). DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid; WES, whole exome sequencing; WGS, whole genome sequencing.