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Impact of clinical exomes in neurodevelopmental and neurometabolic disorders.

Authors :
Evers, Christina
Staufner, Christian
Granzow, Martin
Paramasivam, Nagarajan
Hinderhofer, Katrin
Kaufmann, Lilian
Fischer, Christine
Thiel, Christian
Opladen, Thomas
Kotzaeridou, Urania
Wiemann, Stefan
Schlesner, Matthias
Eils, Roland
Kölker, Stefan
Bartram, Claus R.
Hoffmann, Georg F.
Moog, Ute
Source :
Molecular Genetics & Metabolism. Aug2017, Vol. 121 Issue 4, p297-307. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Whole exome sequencing (WES) is well established in research and is now being introduced into clinically indicated diagnostics (so-called clinical exomes). We evaluated the diagnostic yield and clinical implications of WES in 72 patients from 60 families with undiagnosed neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD), neurometabolic disorders, and dystonias. Pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants leading to a molecular diagnosis could be identified in 21 of the 60 families (overall 35%, in 36% of patients with NDD, in 43% of patients with neurometabolic disorders, in 25% of patients with dystonias). In one family two coexisting autosomal recessive diseases caused by homozygous pathogenic variants in two different genes were diagnosed. In another family, a homozygous frameshift variant in STRADA was found to cause a severe NDD with early onset epilepsy, brain anomalies, hypotonia, heart defect, nephrocalcinosis, macrocephaly and distinctive facies so far designated as PMSE (polyhydramnios, megalencephaly, symptomatic epilepsy) syndrome. In 7 of the 21 families with a molecular diagnosis the pathogenic variants were only identified by clinical follow-up, manual reevaluation of the literature, a change of filter setting, and/or reconsideration of inheritance pattern. Most importantly, clinical implications included management changes in 8 cases and impact on family planning in 20 families with a molecular diagnosis. This study shows that reevaluation and follow-up can improve the diagnostic rate and that WES results have important implications on medical management and family planning. Furthermore, we could confirm STRADA as a gene associated with syndromic ID but find it questionable if the current designation as PMSE depicts the most important clinical features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10967192
Volume :
121
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Genetics & Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124383889
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2017.06.014