Age and Sex but Not ATP7B Genotype Effectively Influence the Clinical Phenotype of Wilson Disease

  • Peter Ferenci
    Department of Internal Medicine III, Gastroenterology and Hepatology,Medical University of Vienna,Vienna,Austria
  • Wolfgang Stremmel
    Department of Internal Medicine IV,Medical University of Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany
  • Anna Członkowska
    Second Department of Neurology, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, and Department of Pharmacology,Medical University of Warsaw,Poland
  • Ferenc Szalay
    First Department of Internal Medicine,Semmelweis University,Budapest,Hungary
  • André Viveiros
    First Department of Internal Medicine,Medical University Innsbruck,Austria
  • Albert Friedrich Stättermayer
    Department of Internal Medicine III, Gastroenterology and Hepatology,Medical University of Vienna,Vienna,Austria
  • Radan Bruha
    Fourth Medical Department, First Faculty of Medicine,Charles University,Prague,Czech Republic
  • Roderick Houwen
    Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital, University Medical Center Utrecht,the Netherlands
  • Tudor Lucian Pop
    Second Pediatric Clinic,University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Iuliu Hatieganu” Cluj‐Napoca,Romania
  • Rudolf Stauber
    Department of Internal Medicine,Medical University of Graz,Graz,Austria
  • Michael Gschwantler
    Internal Medicine 4,Wilhelminen hospital,Vienna,Austria
  • Jan Pfeiffenberger
    Department of Internal Medicine IV,Medical University of Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany
  • Cihan Yurdaydin
    Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology,Ankara University Medical School,Ankara,Turkey
  • Elmar Aigner
    Department of Internal Medicine I,Paracelsus Medical University,Salzburg,Austria
  • Petra Steindl‐Munda
    Department of Internal Medicine III, Gastroenterology and Hepatology,Medical University of Vienna,Vienna,Austria
  • Hans‐Peter Dienes
    Department of Clinical Pathology,Medical University of Vienna,Austria
  • Heinz Zoller
    First Department of Internal Medicine,Medical University Innsbruck,Austria
  • Karl Heinz Weiss
    Department of Internal Medicine IV,Medical University of Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany

Abstract

<jats:p>Wilson disease (WD) is an inherited disorder of hepatic copper metabolism with considerable variation in clinical presentations, the most common ones being liver disease and neuropsychiatric disturbances. This study investigated the clinical presentation in relation to mutations in a large cohort of patients with WD. A total of 1,357 patients (702 children, 655 adults; 1,172 index patients, 185 siblings, all with a Leipzig score ≥4, male/female: 679/678) were studied. The age and the symptoms at presentation were used as key phenotypic markers. Index patients were clinically classified as having either hepatic (n = 711) or neurologic disease (n = 461). Seven hundred fifteen (52.7%) patients had a liver biopsy at diagnosis. DNA was sequenced by the Genetic Analyzers ABI Prism 310 (Perkin Elmer) or 3500 (Applied Biosystems). Three hundred ninety‐four different mutation combinations were detected. The most frequent mutation was H1069Q (c.3207C>A; allele frequency: 46.9%), followed by P767P‐fs (c.2304dupC; 2.85%), P1134P‐fs (c.3402delC; 2.8%), and R969Q (c.2755C>T; 2.18%). There was no correlation between mutations and individual clinical manifestation. There was a gender effect in index patients: Hepatic presentation was more common in females (male/female: 328/383) and neurologic presentation in males (259/202; <jats:italic toggle="yes">P</jats:italic> < 0.001). At diagnosis, 39.5% of children/adolescents (≤18 years) and 58% of adults already had cirrhosis. The presence of cirrhosis did not correlate with the genotype. <jats:italic toggle="yes">Conclusion:</jats:italic> These findings refine and extend our understanding of the natural history and individual spectrum/manifestations of WD. Initially, there is asymptomatic hepatic involvement, which may progress and become symptomatic. Neurologic symptoms present many years later.</jats:p>

Journal

  • Hepatology

    Hepatology 69 (4), 1464-1476, 2019-03-01

    Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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