Background
Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHD), also named Hornstein–Knickenberg syndrome, is a rare autosomal dominant disease characterized by lung cysts, recurrent pneumothoraxes, renal cell carcinoma and skin fibrofolliculomas.
Purpose
This study summarizes the clinical and genetic information of Chinese BHD patients from all available reported cases and explores the relationship between the clinical and genetic spectrum in the hope of improving the prognosis of Chinese BHD patients.
Methods
Relative studies were collected by searching PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, OVID medicine, SinoMed, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data and China Hospital Knowledge Database from January 1, 1977 to December 31, 2021. The search strategy included the following term keys: (Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome OR Hornstein-Kinckenberg syndrome OR familial pulmonary cysts OR familial spontaneous pneumothorax OR fibrofolliculomas OR trichodiscomas OR inherited renal cancer syndromes OR
FLCN
) AND (Chinese OR China).
Results
In total, 287 Chinese patients from 143 families described in 31 references were included in this article. Chinese BHD patients tended to present more pulmonary symptoms but fewer skin lesions and renal malignancies, which appeared to be atypical when compared with Caucasian patients. The
FLCN
mutation spectrum among Chinese BHD patients was established with the mutational hot spot c.1285depC/delC as the most frequent mutation. In addition, this mutation spectrum also showed some differences from other races, with a relatively frequent large deletion c.872–429_1740+1763del (exon 9–14 deletion) reported only in Chinese individuals but no observation of the two mutational hot spots found in Japanese individuals. We also attempted to establish potential pheno-genotype correlations in Chinese BHD patients, but the results were negative.
Conclusion
To improve the prognosis of BHD patients, physicians need to increase their awareness of BHD by focusing on the family history of pneumothorax as well as skin lesions in patients with lung cysts and promptly advising patients on genetic sequencing.
Background
Spontaneous pneumothorax has a high incidence and high rate of recurrence in patients with lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM). The risk factors for pneumothorax and the effects of sirolimus on pneumothorax in patients with LAM are unknown. In our study, multivariate logistic regression was applied to a cross-sectional cohort to investigate factors associated with pneumothorax in LAM patients. Kaplan–Meier analysis was applied in the historical prospective self-controlled study to determine whether sirolimus reduces the risk of pneumothorax recurrence in patients with LAM.
Results
Of the 399 patients registered with LAM-CHINA at our center between May 10, 2017 and August 31, 2020, 142 had a history of pneumothorax at registration. High CT grade and age at presentation ≤ 35 years were associated with a higher risk of pneumothorax in patients with LAM. Postmenopausal status was correlated with a lower risk of pneumothorax. In the historical prospective self-controlled study, the 5-year probability of pneumothorax recurrence was 80% lower in the sirolimus group than in the control group (hazard ratio for pneumothorax recurrence, 0.20; 95% CI, 0.14 to 0.30, P < 0.001 by log-rank test).
Conclusion
Sirolimus reduced the risk of pneumothorax recurrence in LAM patients.
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