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Pulmonary affection of patients with Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: Long-term development and genotype-phenotype-correlation.

Intractable & rare diseases research

Authors: Max Jonathan Stumpf, Christian Alexander Schaefer, Thorsten Mahn, Anna Elisabeth Wolf, Leonie Biener, Doris Hendig, Georg Nickenig, Nadjib Schahab, Carmen Pizarro, Dirk Skowasch

Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is a rare, heritable disease caused by various, mainly recessively transmitted mutations in the gene. Due to calcification of soft connective tissue phenotypic hallmarks are progressive loss of vision, alternation of the skin and early onset atherosclerosis. Beside these main features patients also suffer from impaired alveolar diffusion. The present study focused on impaired lung functioning based on a large cohort of patients with PXE, its long-term development, and genotype-phenotype correlation. Retrospectively, 98 patients and 45 controls were enrolled. All patients underwent body plethysmography and carbon monoxide diffusion testing. Of 35 patients three or more body plethysmographic records were available for long-term analysis. For genotype-phenotype analysis genotypes were grouped as two missense, mixed, or two nonsense mutations. Patients with PXE showed significantly reduced vital capacity ( < 0.05), diffusion capacity ( < 0.01), and diffusion transfer coefficient ( < 0.05). Over a mean period of 38 months diffusion capacity ( < 0.05) and diffusion transfer coefficient ( < 0.01) dropped significantly whereas lung volumes remained unchanged. Genotype-phenotype correlation revealed no connection between gene variants and lung functioning. In conclusion, PXE is accompanied by progressive reduction of alveolar diffusion indicating progressive alterations of lung tissue. Genotype-phenotype correlation with genotypes sorted as missense and nonsense mutations do not explain impaired lung functioning.

2022, International Research and Cooperation Association for Bio & Socio - Sciences Advancement.

PMID: 35261845

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