Intestinal current measurement and nasal potential difference to make a diagnosis of cases with inconclusive CFTR genetics and sweat test

Author:

Minso Rebecca,Schulz Angela,Dopfer Christian,Alfeis Nadine,Barneveld Andrea van,Makartian-Gyulumyan Lena,Hansen Gesine,Junge Sibylle,Müller Carsten,Ringshausen Felix C CORCID,Sauer-Heilborn Annette,Stanke Frauke,Stolpe Cornelia,Tamm Stephanie,Welte Tobias,Dittrich Anna-Maria,Tümmler BurkhardORCID

Abstract

BackgroundNasal potential difference (NPD) and intestinal current measurements (ICM) are cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) biomarkers recommended to make a diagnosis in individuals with inconclusive sweat test and CFTR genetics and a clinical suspicion for cystic fibrosis (CF) or CFTR-related disorder (CFTR-RD).MethodsNPD and ICM were measured according to standard operating procedures of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society Diagnostic Network Working Group.ResultsWe assessed 219 individuals by NPD or ICM who had been referred to our laboratory due to clinical symptoms suggestive of CF, but inconclusive sweat test and CFTR genetics (median age: 16.3 years, range 0.4 to 76 years). CF or CFTR-related disorder was diagnosed in 22 of 29 patients (76%) with a CFTR genotype of unknown or variable clinical significance and in 51 of 190 carriers (27%) of one (35/42) or no (16/148) identified CFTR mutation. If two CFTR sequence variants had been identified, the outcome of NPD and ICM was consistent with the classification of the CFTR2 database. Moreover, a suspected false-positive diagnosis of CF was confirmed in seven and withdrawn in eight patients. Of 26 individuals assessed by both NPD and ICM, eleven individuals exhibited discordant tracings of ICM and NPD, with one measurement being in the CF range and the other in the normal range.ConclusionThe majority of patients whom we diagnosed with CF or CFTR-RD by extended electrophysiology are carriers of the wild-type CFTR coding sequence on at least one of their CF alleles. The disease-causing genetic lesions should reside in the non-coding region of CFTR or elsewhere in the genome, affecting the regulation of CFTR expression in a tissue-depending fashion which may explain the large within-group variability of CFTR activity in the respiratory and intestinal epithelium seen in this group.

Funder

Mukoviszidose eV

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Christiane Herzog Stiftung

Wilhelm-Hirte-Stiftung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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