Disease Markers | 2021

Correlation between Family RB1 Gene Pathogenic Variant with Clinical Features and Prognosis of Retinoblastoma under 5 Years Old

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Retinoblastoma (RB) is the most common primary intraocular malignant tumor in infants and the prototype of human hereditary tumors. Its occurrence and development are closely related to the pathogenic variant of tumor suppressor RB1 gene. We aim to analyze the characteristics of RB1 gene pathogenic variant and clinical phenotype in retinoblastoma patients and their relatives. Children with RB were recruited from August 2007 to November 2017. QT-PCR, probing, and gene sequencing were used to analyze the sequence of RB1 gene in RB children, their parents, or grandparents with a clear history of illness. The SPSS20.0 software was used to analyze the correlation between polymorphisms of RB1 gene and the incidence and prognosis of the enrolled children and relatives. 40 RB children (20 males and 20 females) were recruited, unilateral RB accounted for 52.5% (21/40), bilateral RB accounted for 42.5% (17/40), and trilateral RB accounted for 5.0% (2/40). 6 patients had a clear family history (15.0%, 6/40). It had been verified that 19 probands (47.5%) have RB1 gene pathogenic variants (11 frameshift and 8 missense pathogenic variants), of which germline inheritance accounted for 47.4% (9/19) and nongermline heredity accounted for 52.6% (10/19). Pathogenic variants of 10 nucleic acid sites without reported were found, among which c.2455C>G (p.L819V) was confirmed to have heterozygous pathogenic variants in both a bilateral RB patient and his mother with unilateral RB. Family genetic high-risk factors, bilateral/trilateral RB, >12-month-onset RB have a higher proportion of RB1 gene pathogenic variant than children with no family history, unilateral RB, and ≤12-month (P = 0.021, 0.001,0.034). The proportion of pedigree inheritance of infantile retinoblastoma with bilateral disease is high. There was a certain proportion of RB1 gene pathogenic variant in 3-5-year-old children with bilateral RB, even if they had no family genetic history. Therefore, the detection of RB1 gene pathogenic variant should not only focus on infants but also on the phenotype of RB1 gene pathogenic variant in children over 3 years old with bilateral eye disease.

Volume 2021
Pages None
DOI 10.1155/2021/9981028
Language English
Journal Disease Markers

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