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    About EMERPoliciesDerbyshire Community Health Services NHS Foundation TrustLeicester Partnership TrustNHS Nottingham and Nottinghamshire CCGNottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation TrustNottingham University Hospitals NHS TrustSherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustUniversity Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation TrustUniversity Hospitals Of Leicester NHS TrustOther Resources

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    Contribution of NOTCH1 genetic variants to bicuspid aortic valve and other congenital lesions

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    Author
    Debiec, Radoslaw
    Safwan, Kassem
    Sosin, Michael
    Hetherington, Simon
    Elamin, Mohamed
    Coolman, Sue
    Skinner, Gregory
    Samani, Nilesh
    Bolger, Aidan
    Keyword
    bicuspid aortic valve
    genetics
    congenital heart disease
    Date
    2022-03
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1136/heartjnl-2021-320428
    Publisher's URL
    https://heart.bmj.com/content/early/2022/03/13/heartjnl-2021-320428
    Abstract
    Introduction: Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) affects 1% of the general population. NOTCH1 was the first gene associated with BAV. The proportion of familial and sporadic BAV disease attributed to NOTCH1 mutations has not been estimated. Aim: The aim of our study was to provide an estimate of familial and sporadic BAV disease attributable to NOTCH1 mutations. Methods: The population of our study consisted of participants of the University of Leicester Bicuspid aoRtic vAlVe gEnetic research-8 pedigrees with multiple affected family members and 381 sporadic patients. All subjects underwent NOTCH1 sequencing. A systematic literature search was performed in the NCBI PubMed database to identify publications reporting NOTCH1 sequencing in context of congenital heart disease. Results: NOTCH1 sequencing in 36 subjects from 8 pedigrees identified one variant c.873C>G/p.Tyr291* meeting the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics criteria for pathogenicity. No pathogenic or likely pathogenic NOTCH1 variants were identified in 381 sporadic patients. Literature review identified 64 relevant publication reporting NOTCH1 sequencing in 528 pedigrees and 9449 sporadic subjects. After excluding families with syndromic disease pathogenic and likely pathogenic NOTCH1 variants were detected in 9/435 (2.1%; 95% CI: 0.7% to 3.4%) of pedigrees and between 0.05% (95% CI: 0.005% to 0.10%) and 0.08% (95% CI: 0.02% to 0.13%) of sporadic patients. Incomplete penetrance of definitely pathogenic NOTCH1 mutations was observed in almost half of reported pedigrees. Conclusions: Pathogenic and likely pathogenic NOTCH1 genetic variants explain 2% of familial and <0.1% of sporadic BAV disease and are more likely to associate with tetralogy of Fallot and hypoplastic left heart.
    Citation
    Debiec, R. M., Hamby, S. E., Jones, P. D., Safwan, K., Sosin, M., Hetherington, S. L., Sprigings, D., Sharman, D., Lee, K., Salahshouri, P., Wheeldon, N., Chukwuemeka, A., Boutziouka, V., Elamin, M., Coolman, S., Asiani, M., Kharodia, S., Skinner, G. J., Samani, N. J., Webb, T. R., … Bolger, A. P. (2022). Contribution of NOTCH1 genetic variants to bicuspid aortic valve and other congenital lesions. Heart (British Cardiac Society), heartjnl-2021-320428. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2021-320428
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/15300
    Collections
    Genetics
    Cardiology
    EMCHC

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