Postmortem Genetic Testing for Cardiac Ion Channelopathies in Stillbirths

Patricia B Munroe, Shea Addison, Dominic J Abrams, Neil J Sebire, James Cartwright, Ian Donaldson, Marta M Cohen, Charles Mein, Andrew Tinker, Stephen C Harmer, Qadeer Aziz, Anna Terry, Monika Struebig, Helen R Warren, Bhumita Vadgama, Darren J Fowler, Donald Peebles, Andrew M Taylor, Peter J Lally, Sudhin Thayyil, Patricia B Munroe, Shea Addison, Dominic J Abrams, Neil J Sebire, James Cartwright, Ian Donaldson, Marta M Cohen, Charles Mein, Andrew Tinker, Stephen C Harmer, Qadeer Aziz, Anna Terry, Monika Struebig, Helen R Warren, Bhumita Vadgama, Darren J Fowler, Donald Peebles, Andrew M Taylor, Peter J Lally, Sudhin Thayyil

Abstract

Background: Although stillbirth is a significant health problem worldwide, the definitive cause of death remains elusive in many cases, despite detailed autopsy. In this study of partly explained and unexplained stillbirths, we used next-generation sequencing to examine an extended panel of 35 candidate genes known to be associated with ion channel disorders and sudden cardiac death.

Methods and results: We examined tissue from 242 stillbirths (≥22 weeks), including those where no definite cause of death could be confirmed after a full autopsy. We obtained high-quality DNA from 70 cases, which were then sequenced for a custom panel of 35 genes, 12 for inherited long- and short-QT syndrome genes (LQT1-LQT12 and SQT1-3), and 23 additional candidate genes derived from genome-wide association studies. We examined the functional significance of a selected variant by patch-clamp electrophysiological recording. No predicted damaging variants were identified in KCNQ1 (LQT1) or KCNH2 (LQT2). A rare putative pathogenic variant was found in KCNJ2(LQT7) in 1 case, and several novel variants of uncertain significance were observed. The KCNJ2 variant (p. R40Q), when assessed by whole-cell patch clamp, affected the function of the channel. There was no significant evidence of enrichment of rare predicted damaging variants within any of the candidate genes.

Conclusions: Although a causative link is unclear, 1 putative pathogenic and variants of uncertain significance variant resulting in cardiac channelopathies was identified in some cases of otherwise unexplained stillbirth, and these variants may have a role in fetal demise.

Clinical trial registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01120886.

Keywords: autopsy; cause of death; fetal heart; mutation; stillbirth.

© 2018 American Heart Association, Inc.

Source: PubMed

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