Molecular and clinical profile of von Willebrand disease in Spain (PCM-EVW-ES) : comprehensive genetic analysis by next-generation sequencing of 480 patients

Author

Borràs, Nina

Batlle, Javier

Pérez-Rodríguez, Almudena

López-Fernández, María Fernanda

Rodríguez-Trillo, Ángela

Lourés, Esther

Cid, Ana Rosa

Bonanad, Santiago

Cabrera, Noelia

Moret, Andrés

Parra, Rafael

Mingot-Castellano, María Eva

Balda, Ignacia

Altisent, Carmen

Pérez-Montes, Rocío

Fisac, Rosa María

Iruín, Gemma

Herrero, Sonia

Soto, Inmaculada

de Rueda, Beatriz

Jiménez-Yuste, Víctor

Alonso, Nieves

Vilariño, Dolores

Arija, Olga

Campos, Rosa

Paloma, María José

Bermejo, Nuria

Berrueco, Rubén

Mateo, José

Arribalzaga, Karmele

Marco, Pascual

Palomo Bravo, Ángeles

Sarmiento, Lizheidy

Iñigo, Belén

Nieto Hernández, Maria del Mar

Vidal, Rosa

Martínez, María Paz

Aguinaco, Reyes

César, Jesús María

Ferreiro, María

García-Frade, Javier

Rodríguez-Huerta, Ana María

Cuesta, Jorge

Rodríguez-González, Ramón

García-Candel, Faustino

Cornudella, Rosa

Aguilar Franco, Carlos

Vidal, Francisco

Corrales Insa, Irene

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Publication date

2017

Abstract

Molecular diagnosis of patients with von Willebrand disease is pending in most populations due to the complexity and high cost of conventional molecular analyses. The need for molecular and clinical characterization of von Willebrand disease in Spain prompted the creation of a multicenter project (PCM-EVW-ES) that resulted in the largest prospective cohort study of patients with all types of von Willebrand disease. Molecular analysis of relevant regions of the VWF, including intronic and promoter regions, was achieved in the 556 individuals recruited via the development of a simple, innovative, relatively low-cost protocol based on microfluidic technology and next-generation sequencing. A total of 704 variants (237 different) were identified along VWF, 155 of which had not been previously recorded in the international mutation database. The potential pathogenic effect of these variants was assessed by in silico analysis. Furthermore, four short tandem repeats were analyzed in order to evaluate the ancestral origin of recurrent mutations. The outcome of genetic analysis allowed for the reclassification of 110 patients, identification of 37 asymptomatic carriers (important for genetic counseling) and re-inclusion of 43 patients previously excluded by phenotyping results. In total, 480 patients were definitively diagnosed. Candidate mutations were identified in all patients except 13 type 1 von Willebrand disease, yielding a high genotype-phenotype correlation. Our data reinforce the capital importance and usefulness of genetics in von Willebrand disease diagnostics. The progressive implementation of molecular study as the first-line test for routine diagnosis of this condition will lead to increasingly more personalized and effective care for this patient population.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Publisher

 

Related items

Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI12-01494

Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI15-01643

Instituto de Salud Carlos III RD12-0042-0053

Haematologica ; Vol. 102 (december 2017), p. 2005-2014

Rights

open access

Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, sempre que no sigui amb finalitats comercials, i sempre que es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

This item appears in the following Collection(s)