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Severe high-molecular-weight kininogen deficiency: clinical characteristics, deficiency–causing KNG1 variants, and estimated prevalence


Adenaeuer, Anke; Barco, Stefano; Trinchero, Alice; Krutmann, Sarah; Nazir, Hanan Fawzy; Ambaglio, Chiara; Rocco, Vincenzo; Pancione, Ylenia; Tomao, Luigi; Ruiz-Sáez, Arlette; Echenagucia, Marion; Alesci, Sonja; Sollfrank, Stefanie; Ezigbo, Eyiuche D; Häuser, Friederike; Lackner, Karl J; Lämmle, Bernhard; Rossmann, Heidi (2023). Severe high-molecular-weight kininogen deficiency: clinical characteristics, deficiency–causing KNG1 variants, and estimated prevalence. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 21(2):237-254.

Abstract

Background: Severe high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK) deficiency is a poorly studied autosomal recessive contact system defect caused by pathogenic, biallelic KNG1 variants.

Aim: We performed the first comprehensive analysis of diagnostic, clinical, genetic, and epidemiological aspects of HK deficiency.

Methods: We collected clinical information and blood samples from a newly detected HK-deficient individual and from published cases identified by a systematic literature review. Activity and antigen levels of coagulation factors were determined. Genetic analyses of KNG1 and KLKB1 were performed by Sanger sequencing. The frequency of HK deficiency was estimated considering truncating KNG1 variants from GnomAD.

Results: We identified 48 cases of severe HK deficiency (41 families), of these 47 have been previously published (n = 19 from gray literature). We genotyped 3 cases and critically appraised 10 studies with genetic data. Ten HK deficiency-causing variants (one new) were identified. All of them were truncating mutations, whereas the only known HK amino acid substitution with a relevant phenotype instead causes hereditary angioedema. Conservative estimates suggest an overall prevalence of severe HK deficiency of approximately one case per 8 million population, slightly higher in Africans. Individuals with HK deficiency appeared asymptomatic and had decreased levels of prekallikrein and factor XI, which could lead to misdiagnosis.

Conclusion: HK deficiency is a rare condition with only few known pathogenic variants. It has an apparently good prognosis but is prone to misdiagnosis. Our understanding of its clinical implications is still limited, and an international prekallikrein and HK deficiency registry is being established to fill this knowledge gap.

Keywords: blood coagulation disorders; diagnosis; epidemiology; high-molecular-weight; kallikrein-kinin system; kininogen; partial thromboplastin time

Abstract

Background: Severe high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK) deficiency is a poorly studied autosomal recessive contact system defect caused by pathogenic, biallelic KNG1 variants.

Aim: We performed the first comprehensive analysis of diagnostic, clinical, genetic, and epidemiological aspects of HK deficiency.

Methods: We collected clinical information and blood samples from a newly detected HK-deficient individual and from published cases identified by a systematic literature review. Activity and antigen levels of coagulation factors were determined. Genetic analyses of KNG1 and KLKB1 were performed by Sanger sequencing. The frequency of HK deficiency was estimated considering truncating KNG1 variants from GnomAD.

Results: We identified 48 cases of severe HK deficiency (41 families), of these 47 have been previously published (n = 19 from gray literature). We genotyped 3 cases and critically appraised 10 studies with genetic data. Ten HK deficiency-causing variants (one new) were identified. All of them were truncating mutations, whereas the only known HK amino acid substitution with a relevant phenotype instead causes hereditary angioedema. Conservative estimates suggest an overall prevalence of severe HK deficiency of approximately one case per 8 million population, slightly higher in Africans. Individuals with HK deficiency appeared asymptomatic and had decreased levels of prekallikrein and factor XI, which could lead to misdiagnosis.

Conclusion: HK deficiency is a rare condition with only few known pathogenic variants. It has an apparently good prognosis but is prone to misdiagnosis. Our understanding of its clinical implications is still limited, and an international prekallikrein and HK deficiency registry is being established to fill this knowledge gap.

Keywords: blood coagulation disorders; diagnosis; epidemiology; high-molecular-weight; kallikrein-kinin system; kininogen; partial thromboplastin time

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Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Angiology
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Uncontrolled Keywords:Hematology
Language:English
Date:1 February 2023
Deposited On:29 Jan 2023 08:27
Last Modified:12 Feb 2023 02:10
Publisher:Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
ISSN:1538-7933
OA Status:Hybrid
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtha.2022.11.011
PubMed ID:36700498
  • Content: Accepted Version
  • Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)