Niemann-Pick diseases are acquired through autosomal recessive inheritance, which means that the affected individual inherits two faulty (mutated) genes, one from each parent. If an individual has a single copy of the mutated gene, they are known as a carrier, and it will have no noticeable effect on their everyday lives and health.
The child may inherit identical mutations from each parent (referred to as homozygous), which can sometimes arise through intermarriage, although this may not be obvious over many generations. In other instances the parental mutations may be different and is referred to as heterozygous.
In every pregnancy of a couple who each carry a copy of the faulty Niemann-Pick gene:
- There is a 25% probability that their child will inherit Niemann-Pick disease (s)
- There is a 25% probability that their child will be unaffected
- There is a 50% probability that their child will be a carrier of the disease