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Nephrotic Syndrome, Comprehensive Genetic Testing

The Comprehensive Genetic Test for Nephrotic Syndrome utilizes next-generation sequencing (NGS) to examine 96 genes associated with hereditary nephrotic syndrome and related kidney disorders. It is a targeted gene panel specifically designed to support accurate diagnosis, risk assessment, and prevention.

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The Comprehensive Genetic Test for Nephrotic Syndrome is a specialized genetic test designed to identify mutations in genes associated with hereditary forms of nephrotic syndrome, a renal condition marked by massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, hyperlipidemia, and edema. The comprehensive genetic test for nephrotic syndrome supports early molecular diagnosis, disease subtyping, treatment stratification, and personalized prognosis in both pediatric and adult-onset cases.

Nephrotic syndrome results from injury or dysfunction of the glomerular filtration barrier, particularly involving podocytes and the glomerular basement membrane. While many cases are idiopathic or secondary to systemic conditions, a significant proportion - especially those with congenital onset, steroid resistance, familial clustering, or recurrence after transplantation - are due to monogenic defects. These include syndromic and non-syndromic forms of nephrotic syndrome, each with unique clinical progression and therapy response profiles.

The comprehensive genetic test for nephrotic syndrome includes analysis of key genes such as NPHS1, NPHS2, WT1, LAMB2, COQ2–COQ8B, PLCE1, INF2, ACTN4, and others that encode structural or regulatory proteins crucial for podocyte integrity, slit diaphragm function, mitochondrial metabolism, and filtration barrier maintenance. The comprehensive genetic test for nephrotic syndrome is indicated in patients with early-onset nephrotic syndrome, steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS), familial cases, or syndromic features involving extrarenal organs such as the nervous system, eyes, or genitalia.

Identification of causative mutations provides diagnostic certainty, differentiates between genetic and immune-mediated forms, and informs critical treatment decisions, such as avoiding ineffective immunosuppressive therapy in monogenic disease. Genetic results are essential for transplant risk assessment, prognosis estimation, and family counseling. In addition, they enable carrier detection and prenatal testing in affected families. Variants of uncertain significance may require further interpretation based on clinical phenotype and pathology findings. A negative result does not rule out a genetic cause, particularly if clinical suspicion remains high.

A higher genetic risk is confirmed when pathogenic variants are identified, particularly in patients with early presentation, therapy resistance, or syndromic abnormalities. A lower risk is inferred when no relevant mutations are found, although clinical monitoring and histological correlation remain essential. The integration of genetic data with proteinuria levels, renal biopsy results, therapeutic response, and family history is vital for precise diagnosis, optimized care, and improved long-term outcomes.

The test is performed in a clinical laboratory accredited to ISO 15189 and certified by CLIA and CAP, ensuring the validity, accuracy and international recognition of the results.

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Results Time3-4 Weeks
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