Mutation spectrum and regional distribution of common pathogenic genes in 1 758 Chinese patients with sporadic chronic pancreatitis
10.3760/cma.j.cn115667-20240506-00090
- VernacularTitle:我国1 758例散发慢性胰腺炎患者易感致病基因突变谱及地区分布
- Author:
Yuanchen WANG
1
;
Wenbin ZOU
1
;
Yizhou ZHENG
1
;
Yahui WANG
1
;
Xiaotong MAO
1
;
Shunjiang DENG
1
;
Lianghao HU
1
;
Lei WANG
1
;
Zhaoshen LI
1
;
Zhuan LIAO
1
Author Information
1. 海军军医大学第一附属医院消化内科 上海市胰腺疾病研究所,上海 200433
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Chronic pancreatitis;
Susceptibility genes;
Pathogenic mutations;
Spectrum of mutation;
Regional distribution
- From:
Chinese Journal of Pancreatology
2024;24(6):413-418
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To analyze the mutation spectrum and regional distribution of susceptibility pathogenic genes in Chinese chronic pancreatitis (CP) patients.Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on 1 758 sporadic CP patients who underwent gene sequencing for pathogenic mutations of four major susceptibility genes ( SPINK1, PRSS1, CTRC, and CFTR) at the First Affiliated Hospital of Naval Medical University from December 2010 to November 2022. Pathogenic mutations of four major susceptibility genes were detected by using the next-generation sequencing, and both known and novel pathogenic mutations were validated by Sanger sequencing. The ethnic and regional distributions of pathogenic mutations across different ethnic groups were compared. The ArcMap 10.7 software was used to provide the distribution map of common CP pathogenic mutations in China, and regional differences of these mutations were assessed. According to seven major geographical regions in China, we also evaluated the enrichment differences of CP pathogenic mutations in North China region, Northeast China region, East China region, Central China region, South China region, Southwest China region, and Northwest China region. Results:Among 1 758 CP patients, 50.23% (883/1 758) carried pathogenic mutations, and the SPINK1 pathogenic mutations were most predominated (39.31%). Among them, c.194+2T>C mutations accounted for 94.21% of all SPINK1 mutations. 32.59% (573/1 758) of patients carried single heterozygous mutation of one susceptibility gene, and 4.61% carried homozygous mutation of SPINK1 c.194+2T>C. There was no statistically significant difference on the overall pathogenic mutation carrying rate between Han and ethnic minority patients, whereas the mutation carrying rate of SPINK1 c.194+2T>C was significantly higher among Han patients than among ethnic minorities (37.48% vs 20.00%, P<0.05). Among 31 provinces and cities, the mutation carrying rate of CP patients in Tianjin, Guangdong, Yunnan, Hubei and Anhui were all higher than 60.00%. The SPINK1 mutations accounted for the highest proportion of pathogenic mutations across all provinces (33.33% to 61.54%), and SPINK1 c.194+2T>C was the most prevalent mutation. The mutation carrying rate of SPINK1 c.194+2T>C was higher than 40.00% in Jilin, Liaoning, Tianjin, Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei, Henan, and Guangdong. Distribution analysis of seven geographic regions showed that the overall carrying rate of pathogenic mutations in North China region was significantly lower than that in Central China region (represented by Henan, Hubei, and Hunan; 38.38% vs 58.15%), and the differences were statistically significant ( P<0.05). Additionally, although the carrying rate of SPINK1 c.194+2T>C was highest in Central (41.85%) and Northeast China region (38.78%), no significant differences were found among different regions. Conclusions:Genetic factors was the main etiology of CP in China, with SPINK1 c.194+2T>C mutations being most prevalent. The carrying rates of common susceptibility genes of CP were highest in Central China region as well as SPINK1 c.194+2T>C mutation.