| Literature DB >> 34373523 |
Atsushi Kondo1, China Nagano2, Shinya Ishiko2, Takashi Omori3, Yuya Aoto2, Rini Rossanti2, Nana Sakakibara2, Tomoko Horinouchi2, Tomohiko Yamamura2, Sadayuki Nagai2, Eri Okada2, Yuko Shima4, Koichi Nakanishi5, Takeshi Ninchoji2, Hiroshi Kaito2, Hiroki Takeda2, Hiroaki Nagase2, Naoya Morisada2, Kazumoto Iijima2, Kandai Nozu2.
Abstract
Gitelman syndrome is an autosomal recessive inherited salt-losing tubulopathy. It has a prevalence of around 1 in 40,000 people, and heterozygous carriers are estimated at approximately 1%, although the exact prevalence is unknown. We estimated the predicted prevalence of Gitelman syndrome based on multiple genome databases, HGVD and jMorp for the Japanese population and gnomAD for other ethnicities, and included all 274 pathogenic missense or nonsense variants registered in HGMD Professional. The frequencies of all these alleles were summed to calculate the total variant allele frequency in SLC12A3. The carrier frequency and the disease prevalence were assumed to be twice and the square of the total allele frequency, respectively, according to the Hardy-Weinberg principle. In the Japanese population, the total carrier frequencies were 0.0948 (9.5%) and 0.0868 (8.7%) and the calculated prevalence was 0.00225 (2.3 in 1000 people) and 0.00188 (1.9 in 1000 people) in HGVD and jMorp, respectively. Other ethnicities showed a prevalence varying from 0.000012 to 0.00083. These findings indicate that the prevalence of Gitelman syndrome in the Japanese population is higher than expected and that some other ethnicities also have a higher prevalence than has previously been considered.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34373523 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-95521-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379