Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/2445/215720
Title: | Relevance of genetic testing in the gene-targeted trial era: the Rostock Parkinson’s disease study |
Author: | Westenberger, Ana Skrahina, Volha Usnich, Tatiana Beetz, Christian Vollstedt, Eva-Juliane Laabs, Björn-Hergen Paul, Jefri J Curado, Filipa Skobalj, Snezana Gaber, Hanaa Olmedillas, Maria Morgan, John C Mullin, Stephen Dos Santos Ghilardi, Maria Gabriela Pulera, Mark Musacchio, Thomas Myers, Bennett Negrotti, Anna Pal, Gian Pavese, Nicola Raw, Jason Balck, Alexander Reetz, Kathrin Reiner, Johnathan Lohmann, Katja Stathis, Pantelis Rosenberg, David Ruiz-Lopez, Marta Bogdanovic, Xenia Tönges, Lars Ruiz Martinez, Javier Sammler, Esther Hanssen, Henrike Santos-Lobato, Bruno Lopes Saunders-Pullman, Rachel Schlesinger, Ilana Schofield, Christine M Stocchi, Fabrizio Kasten, Meike Schumacher-Schuh, Artur F Scott, Burton Sesar, Ángel Shafer, Stuart J Pinto De Souza, Carolina Toschi, Giulia Ameziane, Najim Sheridan, Ray Silverdale, Monty Tagliati, Michele Tai, Yen F Tumas, Vitor Urban, Peter Paul Vacca, Laura Crosiers, David Afshari, Mitra Vandenberghe, Wim Valente, Enza Maria Djaldetti, Ruth Brüggemann, Norbert Valzania, Franco Vela-Desojo, Lydia Weill, Caroline Aasly, Jan Olav Weise, David Wojcieszek, Joanne Borsche, Max Cullufi, Paskal Wolz, Martin Yahalom, Gilad Yalcin-Cakmakli, Gul Zittel, Simone Rolfs, Arndt Dogu, Okan Zlotnik, Yair Kandaswamy, Krishna K Lange, Lara M Csoti, Ilona Klein, Christine Bauer, Peter Agarwal, Pinky Hassin-Baer, Sharon Aldred, Jason Alonso-Frech, Fernando Hu, Michele T Dashtipour, Khashayar Anderson, Roderick Araújo, Rui Arkadir, David Eggers, Carsten Avenali, Micol Balal, Mehmet Hauser, Robert A Benizri, Sandra Bette, Sagari Bhatia, Perminder Bonello, Michael Demirkiran, Meltem Hummelgen, Eduardo Braga-Neto, Pedro Brauneis, Sarah Cardoso, Francisco Eduardo Costa Cavallieri, Francesco Schell, Nathalie Elibol, Bulent Classen, Joseph Cohen, Lisa Coletta, Della De Carvalho Aguiar, Patricia De Rosa, Anna Ellenbogen, Aaron Ertan, Sibel Fabiani, Giorgio Nieves, Anette Hernández-Vara, Jorge Falkenburger, Björn H Farrow, Simon Percesepe, Antonio Hussey, Kelly Fay-Karmon, Tsviya Ferencz, Gerald J Fonoff, Erich Talamoni Fragoso, Yara Dadalti Genç, Gençer Gorospe, Arantza Herting, Birgit Nitsan, Zeev Grandas, Francisco Gruber, Doreen Gudesblatt, Mark Gurevich, Tanya Infante, Jon Piccoli, Tommaso Hagenah, Johann Hanagasi, Hasmet A Hinson, Vanessa K Hogg, Elliot Isaacson, Stuart H Jaumà, Serge Koleva-Alazeh, Natalia Sophia, Rani Kuhlenbäumer, Gregor Kühn, Andrea Terwecoren, Annelies Oskooilar, Nader Litvan, Irene López-Manzanares, Lydia Luxmore, Mckenzie Prell, Tino Manandhar, Sujeena Marcaud, Veronique Spitz, Mariana Markopoulou, Katerina Marras, Connie Mckenzie, Mark Matarazzo, Michele Öztop-Çakmak, Özgür Thonke, Sven Merello, Marcelo Mollenhauer, Brit |
Keywords: | Malaltia de Parkinson Codi genètic Parkinson's disease Genetic code |
Issue Date: | 1-Aug-2024 |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press (OUP) |
Abstract: | Estimates of the spectrum and frequency of pathogenic variants in Parkinson's disease (PD) in different populations are currently limited and biased. Furthermore, although therapeutic modification of several genetic targets has reached the clinical trial stage, a major obstacle in conducting these trials is that PD patients are largely unaware of their genetic status and, therefore, cannot be recruited. Expanding the number of investigated PD-related genes and including genes related to disorders with overlapping clinical features in large, well-phenotyped PD patient groups is a prerequisite for capturing the full variant spectrum underlying PD and for stratifying and prioritizing patients for gene-targeted clinical trials. The Rostock Parkinson's disease (ROPAD) study is an observational clinical study aiming to determine the frequency and spectrum of genetic variants contributing to PD in a large international cohort. We investigated variants in 50 genes with either an established relevance for PD or possible phenotypic overlap in a group of 12 580 PD patients from 16 countries [62.3% male; 92.0% White; 27.0% positive family history (FH+), median age at onset (AAO) 59 years] using a next-generation sequencing panel. Altogether, in 1864 (14.8%) ROPAD participants (58.1% male; 91.0% White, 35.5% FH+, median AAO 55 years), a PD-relevant genetic test (PDGT) was positive based on GBA1 risk variants (10.4%) or pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in LRRK2 (2.9%), PRKN (0.9%), SNCA (0.2%) or PINK1 (0.1%) or a combination of two genetic findings in two genes (similar to 0.2%). Of note, the adjusted positive PDGT fraction, i.e. the fraction of positive PDGTs per country weighted by the fraction of the population of the world that they represent, was 14.5%. Positive PDGTs were identified in 19.9% of patients with an AAO <= 50 years, in 19.5% of patients with FH+ and in 26.9% with an AAO <= 50 years and FH+. In comparison to the idiopathic PD group (6846 patients with benign variants), the positive PDGT group had a significantly lower AAO (4 years, P = 9 x 10(-34)). The probability of a positive PDGT decreased by 3% with every additional AAO year (P = 1 x 10(-35)). Female patients were 22% more likely to have a positive PDGT (P = 3 x 10(-4)), and for individuals with FH+ this likelihood was 55% higher (P = 1 x 10(-14)). About 0.8% of the ROPAD participants had positive genetic testing findings in parkinsonism-, dystonia/dyskinesia- or dementia-related genes. In the emerging era of gene-targeted PD clinical trials, our finding that similar to 15% of patients harbour potentially actionable genetic variants offers an important prospect to affected individuals and their families and underlines the need for genetic testing in PD patients. Thus, the insights from the ROPAD study allow for data-driven, differential genetic counselling across the spectrum of different AAOs and family histories and promote a possible policy change in the application of genetic testing as a routine part of patient evaluation and care in PD. |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awae188 |
It is part of: | Brain, 2024, vol. 147, num. 8, p. 2652-2667 |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/215720 |
Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awae188 |
ISSN: | 1460-2156 |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (Institut d'lnvestigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL)) |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
awae188.pdf | 1.05 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
This item is licensed under a
Creative Commons License