Monogenic obesity, characterized by severe, early-onset obesity due to single-gene defects, often resists traditional weight management strategies. This report presents real-life experiences on the ef Show more
Monogenic obesity, characterized by severe, early-onset obesity due to single-gene defects, often resists traditional weight management strategies. This report presents real-life experiences on the efficacy and safety of setmelanotide, an MC4R agonist, in 4 prepubertal children (ages 3-9) with LEPR and POMC deficiencies. Findings indicate that setmelanotide is effective at lower doses in our patients with POMC deficiency (0.3-0.5â mg/day) than the patients with LEPR deficiency (2.5â mg/day). Treatment was generally well-tolerated, with injection site reactions and hyperpigmentation as common side effects. As novel findings, gonadotropin-related effects such as hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis activation and testicular descent were observed in 2 patients. Growth deceleration was noted in 2 children, and recovery from central hypothyroidism in 1 patient with POMC deficiency. Overall, setmelanotide appears to be effective and well-tolerated in young children with monogenic obesity. However, further studies are necessary to evaluate the long-term effects of early intervention on growth and pubertal development. Show less
Allelic series are of candidate therapeutic interest because of the existence of a dose-response relationship between the functionality of a gene and the degree or severity of a phenotype. We define a Show more
Allelic series are of candidate therapeutic interest because of the existence of a dose-response relationship between the functionality of a gene and the degree or severity of a phenotype. We define an allelic series as a collection of variants in which increasingly deleterious mutations lead to increasingly large phenotypic effects, and we have developed a gene-based rare-variant association test specifically targeted to identifying genes containing allelic series. Building on the well-known burden test and sequence kernel association test (SKAT), we specify a variety of association models covering different genetic architectures and integrate these into a Coding-Variant Allelic-Series Test (COAST). Through extensive simulations, we confirm that COAST maintains the type I error and improves the power when the pattern of coding-variant effect sizes increases monotonically with mutational severity. We applied COAST to identify allelic-series genes for four circulating-lipid traits and five cell-count traits among 145,735 subjects with available whole-exome sequencing data from the UK Biobank. Compared with optimal SKAT (SKAT-O), COAST identified 29% more Bonferroni-significant associations with circulating-lipid traits, on average, and 82% more with cell-count traits. All of the gene-trait associations identified by COAST have corroborating evidence either from rare-variant associations in the full cohort (Genebass, n = 400,000) or from common-variant associations in the GWAS Catalog. In addition to detecting many gene-trait associations present in Genebass by using only a fraction (36.9%) of the sample, COAST detects associations, such as that between ANGPTL4 and triglycerides, that are absent from Genebass but that have clear common-variant support. Show less