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Case Reports
. 2020 Nov;104(11):2360-2364.
doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000003104.

Detection of Cryptic Mosaicism in X-linked Alport Syndrome Prompts to Re-evaluate Living-donor Kidney Transplantation

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Case Reports

Detection of Cryptic Mosaicism in X-linked Alport Syndrome Prompts to Re-evaluate Living-donor Kidney Transplantation

Anna Maria Pinto et al. Transplantation. 2020 Nov.

Abstract

Background: Alport syndrome is a hereditary nephropathy caused by mutations in collagen IV genes and characterized by ultrastructural lesions of the glomerular basement membrane. Some patients have a negative family history with apparently de novo mutations. Although somatic mosaicism has been postulated, as cryptic mosaicism cannot be detected from mutational screening on peripheral blood samples, cases in kidney-confined mosaic form have been missed.

Methods: We report the case of a 24-year-old male patient with X-linked Alport syndrome diagnosis due to a COL4A5 pathogenic mutation (c.3334_3337dup [p.Gly1113Alafs25]). The same mutation had not been previously detected on a peripheral blood sample of maternal DNA. However, the mother, who was undertaking a clinical re-evaluation to take in consideration the possibility of a living-kidney transplantation, had experienced persistent microhematuria since the age of 10 years.

Results: A next-generation sequencing approach performed on maternal DNA from both peripheral blood sample and urine-derived podocyte-lineage cells unmasked the COL4A5 mutation only in the podocyte-lineage cells.

Conclusions: This finding unveils an early postzygotic event which can explain both the renal involvement and germline mosaicism. It changes the inheritance risk for each pregnancy raising it to 50% and underlines the need for different clinical management in the mother. This seems to indicate that a case-by-case more cautious approach is needed with mother-to-son kidney transplants.

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