Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America.
Department of Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2023 Aug 31;18(8):e0286469. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0286469. eCollection 2023.
Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD), a relatively common autosomal recessive genetic disorder, is underdiagnosed in symptomatic individuals. We sought to compare the risk of liver transplantation associated with hepatitis C infection with AATD heterozygotes and homozygotes and determine if SERPINA1 sequencing would identify undiagnosed AATD. We performed a retrospective cohort study in a deidentified Electronic Health Record (EHR)-linked DNA biobank with 72,027 individuals genotyped for the M, Z, and S alleles in SERPINA1. We investigated liver transplantation frequency by genotype group and compared with hepatitis C infection. We performed SERPINA1 sequencing in carriers of pathogenic AATD alleles who underwent liver transplantation. Liver transplantation was associated with the Z allele (ZZ: odds ratio [OR] = 1.31, p<2e-16; MZ: OR = 1.02, p = 1.2e-13) and with hepatitis C (OR = 1.20, p<2e-16). For liver transplantation, there was a significant interaction between genotype and hepatitis C (ZZ: interaction OR = 1.23, p = 4.7e-4; MZ: interaction OR = 1.11, p = 6.9e-13). Sequencing uncovered a second, rare, pathogenic SERPINA1 variant in six of 133 individuals with liver transplants and without hepatitis C. Liver transplantation was more common in individuals with AATD risk alleles (including heterozygotes), and AATD and hepatitis C demonstrated evidence of a gene-environment interaction in relation to liver transplantation. The current AATD screening strategy may miss diagnoses whereas SERPINA1 sequencing may increase diagnostic yield for AATD, stratify risk for liver disease, and inform clinical management for individuals with AATD risk alleles and liver disease risk factors.
α-1 抗胰蛋白酶缺乏症(AATD)是一种相对常见的常染色体隐性遗传疾病,在有症状的个体中诊断不足。我们旨在比较丙型肝炎感染与 AATD 杂合子和纯合子个体肝移植相关的风险,并确定 SERPINA1 测序是否能识别未诊断的 AATD。我们在一个经身份识别的电子健康记录(EHR)链接 DNA 生物库中进行了一项回顾性队列研究,该生物库纳入了 72027 名个体,他们的 SERPINA1 基因 M、Z 和 S 等位基因均进行了基因分型。我们根据基因型组调查了肝移植的频率,并与丙型肝炎感染进行了比较。我们对接受肝移植且携带致病性 AATD 等位基因的个体进行了 SERPINA1 测序。肝移植与 Z 等位基因(ZZ:比值比 [OR] = 1.31,p<2e-16;MZ:OR = 1.02,p = 1.2e-13)和丙型肝炎(OR = 1.20,p<2e-16)相关。对于肝移植,基因型与丙型肝炎之间存在显著的交互作用(ZZ:交互 OR = 1.23,p = 4.7e-4;MZ:交互 OR = 1.11,p = 6.9e-13)。在 133 名无丙型肝炎但接受肝移植的个体中,测序发现了另外 6 个罕见的致病性 SERPINA1 变体。AATD 风险等位基因(包括杂合子)个体中肝移植更为常见,AATD 和丙型肝炎在肝移植方面表现出基因-环境相互作用的证据。目前的 AATD 筛查策略可能会遗漏诊断,而 SERPINA1 测序可能会增加 AATD 的诊断率,对肝病风险进行分层,并为 AATD 风险等位基因和肝病风险因素的个体提供临床管理信息。