Litcius/Paper detail

Genetic, biochemical, and clinical features of LCAT deficiency: update for 2020

Chiara Pavanello, Laura Calabresi

2020Current Opinion in Lipidology60 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Genetic LCAT deficiency is a rare metabolic disorder characterized by low-plasma HDL cholesterol levels. Clinical manifestations of the disease include corneal opacification, anemia, and renal disease, which represents the major cause of morbidity and mortality in carriers. RECENT FINDINGS: Biochemical and clinical manifestations of the disease are very heterogeneous among carriers. The collection of large series of affected individuals is needed to answer various open questions on this rare disorder of lipid metabolism, such as the cause of renal damage in patients with complete LCAT deficiency and the cardiovascular risk in carriers of different LCAT gene mutations. SUMMARY: Familial LCAT deficiency is a rare disease, with serious clinical manifestations, which can occur in the first decades of life, and presently with no cure. The timely diagnosis in carriers, together with the identification of disease biomarkers able to predict the evolution of clinical manifestations, would be of great help in the identification of carriers to address to future available therapies.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDiseaseLecithin—cholesterol acyltransferaseBioinformaticsTangier diseaseIntensive care medicineCholesterolInternal medicineGeneGeneticsBiologyABCA1TransporterApolipoprotein BBiomedical Research and PathophysiologyMetabolism and Genetic DisordersLipid metabolism and disorders