Reproductive Carrier Screening: Identifying Families at Risk for Familial Hypercholesterolemia in the United States

Author:

Souter Vivienne1ORCID,Becraft Emily1ORCID,Brummitt Samantha1,Gall Bryan J.1ORCID,Prigmore Brittany1,Wang Yang1,Benn Peter2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Natera, Inc, Austin, TX (V.S., E.B., S.B., B.J.G., B.P., Y.W.).

2. University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT (P.B.).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Familial hypercholesterolemia is a treatable genetic condition but remains underdiagnosed. We reviewed the frequency of pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants in the LDLR gene in female individuals receiving reproductive carrier screening. METHODS: This retrospective observational study included samples from female patients (aged 18–55 years) receiving a 274-gene carrier screening panel from January 2020 to September 2022. LDLR exons and their 10 base pair flanking regions were sequenced. Carrier frequency for P/LP variants was calculated for the entire population and by race/ethnicity. The most common variants and their likely functional effects were evaluated. RESULTS: A total of 91 637 tests were performed on women with race/ethnicity reported as Asian (8.8%), Black (6.1%), Hispanic (8.5%), White (29.0%), multiple or other (15.0%), and missing (33.0%). Median age was 32.8 years with 83 728 (91%) <40 years. P/LP LDLR variants were identified in 283 samples (1 in 324). No patients were identified with >1 P/LP variant. LDLR carrier frequency was higher in Asian (1 in 191 [95% CI, 1 in 142–258]) compared with White (1 in 417 [95% CI, 1 in 326–533]; P <0.001) or Black groups (1 in 508 [95% CI, 1 in 284–910]; P =0.004). The most common variants differed between populations. Of all variants, at least 25.0% were predicted as null variants. CONCLUSIONS: P/LP variants in LDLR are common. Expanding the use of reproductive carrier screening to include genes associated with FH presents another opportunity to identify people predisposed to cardiovascular disease.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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