The penetrance of age-related monogenic disease depends on ascertainment context

Author:

Mirshahi Uyenlinh LORCID,Colclough Kevin,Wright Caroline F,Wood Andrew R,Beaumont Robin N,Tyrrell Jessica,Laver Thomas W,Stahl Richard,Golden Alicia,Goehringer Jessica M,Frayling Timothy F,Hattersley Andrew T,Carey David J,Weedon Michael N,Patel Kashyap A

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDAccurate penetrance of monogenic disorders is often unknown due to a phenotype-first approach to genetic testing. Here, we use a genotype-first approach in four large cohorts with different ascertainment contexts to accurately estimate penetrance of the three commonest causes of monogenic diabetes, Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young (MODY). We contrast HNF1A-MODY / HNF4A-MODY which causes an age-related progressive diabetes and GCK-MODY, which causes life-long mild hyperglycaemia.METHODSWe analysed clinical and genetic sequencing data from four different cohorts: 1742 probands referred for clinical MODY testing; 2194 family members of the MODY probands; 132,194 individuals from an American hospital-based cohort; and 198,748 individuals from a UK population-based cohort.RESULTSAge-related penetrance of diabetes for pathogenic variants in HNF1A and HNF4A was substantially lower in the clinically unselected cohorts compared to clinically referred probands (ranging from 32% to 98% at age 40yrs for HNF1A, and 21% to 99% for HNF4A). The background rate of diabetes, but not clinical features or variant type, explained the reduced penetrance in the unselected cohorts. In contrast, penetrance of mild hyperglycaemia for pathogenic GCK variants was similarly high across cohorts (ranging from 89 to 97%) despite substantial variation in the background rates of diabetes.CONCLUSIONSAscertainment context is crucial when interpreting the consequences of monogenic variants for age-related variably penetrant disorders. This finding has important implications for opportunistic screening during genomic testing.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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