Relatively little is known about phenotypic variability in nonsyndromic nephropathy associated with the gene encoding the WT1 transcription factor. We report a 12-mo-old female who presented with vomiting, diarrhea, and fatigue in the setting of renal failure and malignant hypertension. Trio ultra-rapid whole-genome sequencing identified a novel, likely pathogenic, de novo missense variant (c.485T > A, p.Val162Asp) in WT1 in 46 h, consistent with a diagnosis of nephrotic syndrome type 4 (NPHS4; OMIM 256370). This disorder typically presents with nephrotic syndrome (gross proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, and edema). Rapid diagnosis had an immediate impact on her clinical management in the pediatric intensive care unit. Diagnostic renal biopsy was avoided, and placement of permanent dialysis access, a gastrostomy tube, and bilateral nephrectomy were accelerated. This report expands the presenting phenotype of nonsyndromic nephrotic syndrome and/or renal failure due to heterozygous variants in WT1 (NPHS4). It also highlights the relationship between time to genomic diagnosis and clinical utility in critically ill infants.
Keywords: abnormal renal physiology; abnormality of urine homeostasis; anuria; chronic metabolic acidosis; episodic vomiting; global glomerulosclerosis; hypertensive crisis; hyponatremia; intermittent diarrhea; nephrotic range proteinuria.
© 2020 Sanford et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.