Title of article
Spectrum and Prevalence of Mutations Involving BrS1- Through BrS12-Susceptibility Genes in a Cohort of Unrelated Patients Referred for Brugada Syndrome Genetic Testing: Implications for Genetic Testing
Author/Authors
Crotti، نويسنده , , Lia and Marcou، نويسنده , , Cherisse A. and Tester، نويسنده , , David J. and Castelletti، نويسنده , , Silvia and Giudicessi، نويسنده , , John R. and Torchio، نويسنده , , Margherita and Medeiros-Domingo، نويسنده , , Argelia and Simone، نويسنده , , Savastano and Will، نويسنده , , Melissa L. and Dagradi، نويسنده , , Federica and Schwartz، نويسنده , , Peter J. and Ackerman، نويسنده , , Michael J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
9
From page
1410
To page
1418
Abstract
Objectives
m of this study was to provide the spectrum and prevalence of mutations in the 12 Brugada syndrome (BrS)–susceptibility genes discovered to date in a single large cohort of unrelated BrS patients.
ound
a potentially lethal heritable arrhythmia syndrome diagnosed electrocardiographically by coved-type ST-segment elevation in the right precordial leads (V1 to V3; type 1 Brugada electrocardiographic [ECG] pattern) and the presence of a personal/family history of cardiac events.
s
polymerase chain reaction, denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography, and DNA sequencing, comprehensive mutational analysis of BrS1- through BrS12-susceptibility genes was performed in 129 unrelated patients with possible/probable BrS (46 with clinically diagnosed BrS [ECG pattern plus personal/family history of a cardiac event] and 83 with a type 1 BrS ECG pattern only).
s
l, 27 patients (21%) had a putative pathogenic mutation, absent in 1,400 Caucasian reference alleles, including 21 patients with an SCN5A mutation, 2 with a CACNB2B mutation, and 1 each with a KCNJ8 mutation, a KCND3 mutation, an SCN1Bb mutation, and an HCN4 mutation. The overall mutation yield was 23% in the type 1 BrS ECG pattern-only patients versus 17% in the clinically diagnosed BrS patients and was significantly greater among young men <20 years of age with clinically diagnosed BrS and among patients who had a prolonged PQ interval.
sions
ntified putative pathogenic mutations in ∼20% of our BrS cohort, with BrS genes 2 through 12 accounting for <5%. Importantly, the yield was similar between patients with only a type 1 BrS ECG pattern and those with clinically established BrS. The yield approaches 40% for SCN5A-mediated BrS (BrS1) when the PQ interval exceeds 200 ms. Calcium channel–mediated BrS is extremely unlikely in the absence of a short QT interval.
Keywords
ST-segment elevation , Brugada syndrome , Cardiac Arrest , Ventricular arrhythmias , genetic testing
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Record number
1754871
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