Exonic variants affecting pre-mRNA splicing add to genetic burden in chronic pancreatitis

We read with great interest the recent paper by Rosendahl et al1 describing the incidence of variants in CFTR, SPINK1, CTRC and PRSS1 in a German cohort of chronic pancreatitis cases. The authors conclude that chronic pancreatitis is a complex genetic disease and the net effect of mutations in multiple susceptibility genes underlies increased disease risk. Indeed, in the studied cohort, at least one genetic risk factor was identified in 36.7% of patients. Surprisingly, however, only 6.5% of cases carried multiple risk factors, which seems to contradict the complex genetics theory of chronic pancreatitis. While it is likely that more susceptibility genes are yet to be discovered, we submit that known risk genes may have been incompletely characterised resulting in underestimation of the true genetic burden in chronic pancreatitis. Discovery studies tend to focus on exons and exon-intron boundaries and may thus miss many intronic variants....
Source: Gut - Category: Gastroenterology Authors: Tags: PostScript Source Type: research