
Clinical characteristics and prognosis analysis of idiopathic and hereditary pulmonary hypertension patients with ACVRL1 gene mutations
Author(s) -
Zhang Xinyu,
Zhang Chen,
Li Qiangqiang,
Piao Chunmei,
Zhang Hongsheng,
Gu Hong
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pulmonary circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.791
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2045-8940
DOI - 10.1177/20458940211044577
Subject(s) - acvrl1 , medicine , bmpr2 , pulmonary hypertension , missense mutation , gene mutation , cardiology , mutation , gastroenterology , endoglin , gene , genetics , bone morphogenetic protein , stem cell , cd34 , biology
Pulmonary arterial hypertension is a kind of heart and lung vascular disease with low incidence and poor prognosis. Genetic variants are the important factors of pulmonary arterial hypertension. The mutations of activin receptor‐like kinase‐1 ( ACVRL1 ) could cause pulmonary arteriole obstruction and occlusion in pulmonary arterial hypertension patients. The ACVRL1 gene mutation and clinical characteristics of Chinese idiopathic or hereditary pulmonary hypertension (IPAH/HPAH) patients are still unclear. This study aimed to retrospectively study the mutation characteristics of ACVRL1 gene in Chinese IPAH/HPAH patients and its effect on clinical prognosis. We analyzed the clinical, functional, hemodynamic and mutation characteristics of 12 IPAH/HPAH patients with ACVRL1 mutations and compared with 94 IPAH/HPAH patients (27 patients carried bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 2 ( BMPR2 ) mutations and 67 without mutations). All ACVRL1 mutations of 12 patients were single nucleotide missense mutations. The ratio of male to female in 12 patients was 1:1. The diagnosis age of ACVRL1 mutation patients was younger than that of BMPR2 mutation patients (13.6 ± 11.3 years vs. 16.0 ± 12.9 years) but higher than that of patients without mutations (13.6 ± 11.3 years vs. 8.8 ± 8.5 years, p = 0.006). IPAH/HPAH patients with ACVRL1 mutation have rapid disease progresses, high overall mortality rate (approximately 50%) and no response to the acute pulmonary vasodilation test. In conclusion, this is the first study to analyze the ACVRL1 gene mutation and clinical characteristics of Chinese IPAH/HPAH patients. It is beneficial to screen ACVRL1 gene mutation for IPAH/HPAH patients to facilitate genetic counseling and early prevention and treatment.