First reports of primary ciliary dyskinesia caused by a shared DNAH11 allele in Canadian Inuit

Author:

Hunter‐Schouela Julia1,Geraghty Michael T.1,Hegele Robert A.2,Dyment David A.3,St Pierre David4,Richer Julie3,Sheffield Holden5,Zariwala Maimoona A.6,Knowles Michael R.7,Lehman Anna8,Dell Sharon9,Shapiro Adam J.10,Kovesi Thomas A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. Department of Medicine and Robarts Research Institute Western University London Ontario Canada

3. Department of Genetics Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Ottawa Ontario Canada

4. Respiratory Epidemiology and Clinical Research Unit, Department of Medicine McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

5. Department of Pediatrics Qikiqtani General Hospital Iqaluit Nunavut Canada

6. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Marsico Lung Institute University of North Carolina Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

7. Department of Medicine, Marsico Lung Institute University of North Carolina School of Medicine Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

8. Department of Medical Genetics University of British Columbia on behalf of the Silent Genomes Precision Medicine Consortium Vancouver British Columbia Canada

9. Department of Pediatrics BC Children's Hospital Vancouver British Columbia Canada

10. Department of Pediatrics McGill University Health Centre Research Institute Montreal Quebec Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrimary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is typically an autosomal recessive disease characterized by recurrent infections of the lower respiratory tract, frequent and severe otitis media, chronic rhinosinusitis, neonatal respiratory distress, and organ laterality defects. While severe lower respiratory tract infections and bronchiectasis are common in Inuit, PCD has not been recognized in this population.MethodsWe report a case series of seven Inuit patients with PCD identified by genetic testing in three Canadian PCD centers.ResultsPatients ranged from 4 to 59 years of age (at time of last evaluation) and originated in the Qikiqtaaluk region (Baffin Island, n = 5), Nunavut, or Nunavik (northern Quebec, n = 2), Canada. They had typical features of PCD, including neonatal respiratory distress (five patients), situs inversus totalis (four patients), bronchiectasis (four patients), chronic atelectasis (six patients), and chronic otitis media (six patients). Most had chronic rhinitis. Genetic evaluation demonstrated that all had homozygous pathogenic variants in DNAH11 at NM_001277115.1:c.4095+2C>A.ConclusionsThe discovery of this homozygous DNAH11 variant in widely disparate parts of the Nunangat (Inuit homelands) suggests this is a founder mutation that may be widespread in Inuit. Thus, PCD may be an important cause of chronic lung, sinus, and middle ear disease in this population. Inuit with chronic lung disease, including bronchiectasis or laterality defects, should undergo genetic testing for PCD. Consideration of including PCD genetic analysis in routine newborn screening should be considered in Inuit regions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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