Suppr超能文献

丹特病

Dent Disease

作者信息

Lieske John C, Milliner Dawn S, Beara-Lasic Lada, Harris Peter, Cogal Andrea, Abrash Elizabeth

机构信息

Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York

Abstract

CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Dent disease, an X-linked disorder of proximal renal tubular dysfunction, is characterized by low molecular weight (LMW) proteinuria, hypercalciuria, and at least one additional finding including nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, hematuria, hypophosphatemia, chronic kidney disease (CKD), and evidence of X-linked inheritance. Males younger than age ten years may manifest only LMW proteinuria and/or hypercalciuria, which are usually asymptomatic. Thirty to 80% of affected males develop end-stage renal disease (ESRD) between ages 30 and 50 years; in some instances ESRD does not develop until the sixth decade of life or later. The disease may also be accompanied by rickets or osteomalacia, growth restriction, and short stature. Disease severity can vary within the same family. Males with Dent disease 2 (caused by pathogenic variants in ) may also have mild intellectual disability, cataracts, and/or elevated muscle enzymes. Due to random X-chromosome inactivation, some female carriers may manifest hypercalciuria and, rarely, renal calculi and moderate LMW proteinuria. Females rarely develop CKD.

DIAGNOSIS/TESTING: The diagnosis is established in a male proband with the typical clinical findings and a family history consistent with X-linked inheritance who has a pathogenic variant in either (known as Dent disease 1) or in (known as Dent disease 2). Heterozygous females are usually asymptomatic, but some exhibit LMW proteinuria and hypercalciuria, and others with kidney stones have also been described. Heterozygous females are most likely to be identified by familial molecular genetic testing related to a male proband.

MANAGEMENT

The primary goals of treatment are to decrease hypercalciuria, prevent kidney stones and nephrocalcinosis, and delay the progression of CKD. Interventions aimed at decreasing hypercalciuria and preventing kidney stones and nephrocalcinosis have not been tested in randomized controlled trials. Although thiazide diuretics can decrease urinary calcium excretion in boys with Dent disease, side effects limit their use. The effectiveness of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers in preventing or delaying further loss of kidney function in children with proteinuria is unclear. Renal replacement therapy is necessary in those with ESRD. Bone disease, when present, responds to vitamin D supplementation and phosphorus repletion. Growth failure may be treated with human growth hormone without adversely affecting kidney function. Monitor at least annually urinary calcium excretion, renal function (glomerular filtration rate), and the parameters used to stage CKD (i.e., blood pressure, hematocrit/hemoglobin, and serum calcium and phosphorous concentrations). Monitor more frequently when CKD is evident. Exposure to potential renal toxins (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, aminoglycoside antibiotics, and intravenous contrast agents). Clarify the genetic status of at-risk male relatives either by molecular genetic testing (if the pathogenic variant in the family is known) or by measurement of urinary excretion of low molecular weight proteins (LMWPs).

GENETIC COUNSELING

Dent disease is inherited in an X-linked manner. The father of an affected male will not have the disease nor will he be hemizygous for the pathogenic variant. If the mother of the proband has a pathogenic variant, the chance of transmitting it in each pregnancy is 50%. Males who inherit the pathogenic variant will be affected; females who inherit the pathogenic variant will be carriers and will usually not be significantly affected. Affected males pass the pathogenic variant to all of their daughters (who become carriers) and none of their sons. Carrier testing for at-risk female relatives and prenatal and preimplantation genetic testing are possible if the pathogenic variant in the family has been identified.

摘要

临床特征

丹特病是一种X连锁的近端肾小管功能障碍疾病,其特征为低分子量(LMW)蛋白尿、高钙尿症,以及至少一项其他表现,包括肾钙质沉着症、肾结石、血尿、低磷血症、慢性肾脏病(CKD),以及X连锁遗传证据。10岁以下男性可能仅表现为LMW蛋白尿和/或高钙尿症,通常无症状。30%至80%的患病男性在30至50岁之间发展为终末期肾病(ESRD);在某些情况下,ESRD直到生命的第六个十年或更晚才会出现。该疾病还可能伴有佝偻病或骨软化症、生长受限和身材矮小。同一家庭中疾病严重程度可能有所不同。患有丹特病2型(由 中的致病变异引起)的男性也可能有轻度智力残疾、白内障和/或肌肉酶升高。由于随机的X染色体失活,一些女性携带者可能表现出高钙尿症,很少见的情况下会出现肾结石和中度LMW蛋白尿。女性很少发展为CKD。

诊断/检测:对于具有典型临床发现且家族史符合X连锁遗传的男性先证者,若其 (称为丹特病1型)或 (称为丹特病2型)存在致病变异,则可确立诊断。杂合子女性通常无症状,但有些会表现出LMW蛋白尿和高钙尿症,也有描述其他患有肾结石的杂合子女性。杂合子女性最有可能通过与男性先证者相关的家族分子遗传学检测来识别。

管理

治疗的主要目标是减少高钙尿症、预防肾结石和肾钙质沉着症,并延缓CKD的进展。旨在减少高钙尿症以及预防肾结石和肾钙质沉着症的干预措施尚未在随机对照试验中得到验证。虽然噻嗪类利尿剂可减少丹特病男孩的尿钙排泄,但副作用限制了其使用。血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂和血管紧张素受体阻滞剂在预防或延缓蛋白尿儿童肾功能进一步丧失方面的有效性尚不清楚。ESRD患者需要进行肾脏替代治疗。存在骨病时,补充维生素D和补充磷有效。生长发育迟缓可用人生长激素治疗,且不会对肾功能产生不利影响。至少每年监测尿钙排泄、肾功能(肾小球滤过率)以及用于CKD分期的参数(即血压、血细胞比容/血红蛋白以及血清钙和磷浓度)。当CKD明显时,监测应更频繁。避免接触潜在的肾毒素(非甾体类抗炎药、氨基糖苷类抗生素和静脉造影剂)。通过分子遗传学检测(如果家族中的致病变异已知)或通过测量低分子量蛋白质(LMWP)的尿排泄量来明确高危男性亲属的遗传状况。

遗传咨询

丹特病以X连锁方式遗传。患病男性的父亲不会患有该疾病,也不会是致病基因的半合子。如果先证者的母亲有一个致病变异,每次怀孕传递该变异的几率为50%。继承致病变异的男性会患病;继承致病变异的女性将成为携带者,通常不会受到明显影响。患病男性将致病变异传递给所有女儿(成为携带者),而不会传递给任何儿子。如果家族中的致病变异已被确定,则可以对高危女性亲属进行携带者检测以及进行产前和植入前基因检测。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验