Familial chylomicronemia syndrome (FCS) is a severe type of hypertriglyceridemia (HTG). Despite its rarity, we have encountered more than 100 patients with FCS at our center. Therefore, we aimed to pr Show more
Familial chylomicronemia syndrome (FCS) is a severe type of hypertriglyceridemia (HTG). Despite its rarity, we have encountered more than 100 patients with FCS at our center. Therefore, we aimed to provide a useful resource for clinicians who may encounter such patients and help the scientific community accumulate knowledge to manage this disease. This retrospective study described the clinical characteristics and management of FCS patients at (King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia). In total, 29 pediatric patients were included, with a median age of 2.2 months [IQR: 1.3, 12]. Males predominated (62.0%). Key symptoms included a milky blood sample (72.4%), a family history of HTG (65.5%), hepatosplenomegaly (44.8%), acute pancreatitis (31.0%), and eruptive xanthoma (13.8%). Gemfibrozil (22 patients) reduced TG from 47.6 ± 55.7 to 9.4 ± 7.5 mmol/L (mean reduction 38.2 ± 54.5 mmol/L, P<0.001). Fenofibrate (19 patients) lowered TG from 45.4 ± 56.4 to 18.4 ± 13.1 mmol/L (mean difference 27.1 ± 52.0 mmol/L, P=0.001). While the Niacin-aspirin (4 patients) and diet alone (4 patients) had no significant effect (P=1.000) and (P=0.125), respectively. The rarity of FCS makes it more challenging for scientists and clinicians to achieve advancements in its management. We observed that anti-TG medications, especially fibrate derivatives, can be used safely in pediatric patients. They displayed excellent ability to control TG levels in combination with diet restrictions, and treatment compliance was good. Among fibrate derivatives, gemfibrozil controlled TG levels better than fenofibrate, and neither drug had significant side effects. Show less
Nonsyndromic deafness locus (DFNB48) segregating as an autosomal recessive trait has been mapped to the long arm of chromosome 15 in bands q23-q25.1 in five large Pakistani families. The deafness phen Show more
Nonsyndromic deafness locus (DFNB48) segregating as an autosomal recessive trait has been mapped to the long arm of chromosome 15 in bands q23-q25.1 in five large Pakistani families. The deafness phenotype in one of these five families (PKDF245) is linked to D15S1005 with a lod score of 8.6 at theta=0, and there is a critical linkage interval of approximately 7 cM on the Marshfield human genetic map, bounded by microsatellite markers D15S216 (70.73 cM) and D15S1041 (77.69 cM). MYO9A, NR2E3, BBS4, and TMC3 are among the candidate genes in the DFNB48 region. The identification of another novel nonsyndromic recessive deafness locus demonstrates the high degree of locus heterogeneity for hearing impairment, particularly in the Pakistani population. Show less