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Neuromuscular disease genetics in under-represented populations: increasing data diversity.

Authors :
Wilson LA
Macken WL
Perry LD
Record CJ
Schon KR
Frezatti RSS
Raga S
Naidu K
Köken ÖY
Polat I
Kapapa MM
Dominik N
Efthymiou S
Morsy H
Nel M
Fassad MR
Gao F
Patel K
Schoonen M
Bisschoff M
Vorster A
Jonvik H
Human R
Lubbe E
Nonyane M
Vengalil S
Nashi S
Srivastava K
Lemmers RJLF
Reyaz A
Mishra R
Töpf A
Trainor CI
Steyn EC
Mahungu AC
van der Vliet PJ
Ceylan AC
Hiz AS
Çavdarlı B
Semerci Gündüz CN
Ceylan GG
Nagappa M
Tallapaka KB
Govindaraj P
van der Maarel SM
Narayanappa G
Nandeesh BN
Wa Somwe S
Bearden DR
Kvalsund MP
Ramdharry GM
Oktay Y
Yiş U
Topaloğlu H
Sarkozy A
Bugiardini E
Henning F
Wilmshurst JM
Heckmann JM
McFarland R
Taylor RW
Smuts I
van der Westhuizen FH
Sobreira CFDR
Tomaselli PJ
Marques W Jr
Bhatia R
Dalal A
Srivastava MVP
Yareeda S
Nalini A
Vishnu VY
Thangaraj K
Straub V
Horvath R
Chinnery PF
Pitceathly RDS
Muntoni F
Houlden H
Vandrovcova J
Reilly MM
Hanna MG
Source :
Brain : a journal of neurology [Brain] 2023 Dec 01; Vol. 146 (12), pp. 5098-5109.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Neuromuscular diseases (NMDs) affect ∼15 million people globally. In high income settings DNA-based diagnosis has transformed care pathways and led to gene-specific therapies. However, most affected families are in low-to-middle income countries (LMICs) with limited access to DNA-based diagnosis. Most (86%) published genetic data is derived from European ancestry. This marked genetic data inequality hampers understanding of genetic diversity and hinders accurate genetic diagnosis in all income settings. We developed a cloud-based transcontinental partnership to build diverse, deeply-phenotyped and genetically characterized cohorts to improve genetic architecture knowledge, and potentially advance diagnosis and clinical management. We connected 18 centres in Brazil, India, South Africa, Turkey, Zambia, Netherlands and the UK. We co-developed a cloud-based data solution and trained 17 international neurology fellows in clinical genomic data interpretation. Single gene and whole exome data were analysed via a bespoke bioinformatics pipeline and reviewed alongside clinical and phenotypic data in global webinars to inform genetic outcome decisions. We recruited 6001 participants in the first 43 months. Initial genetic analyses 'solved' or 'possibly solved' ∼56% probands overall. In-depth genetic data review of the four commonest clinical categories (limb girdle muscular dystrophy, inherited peripheral neuropathies, congenital myopathy/muscular dystrophies and Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy) delivered a ∼59% 'solved' and ∼13% 'possibly solved' outcome. Almost 29% of disease causing variants were novel, increasing diverse pathogenic variant knowledge. Unsolved participants represent a new discovery cohort. The dataset provides a large resource from under-represented populations for genetic and translational research. In conclusion, we established a remote transcontinental partnership to assess genetic architecture of NMDs across diverse populations. It supported DNA-based diagnosis, potentially enabling genetic counselling, care pathways and eligibility for gene-specific trials. Similar virtual partnerships could be adopted by other areas of global genomic neurological practice to reduce genetic data inequality and benefit patients globally.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2156
Volume :
146
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Brain : a journal of neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37516995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad254