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Personalised virtual gene panels reduce interpretation workload and maintain diagnostic rates of proband-only clinical exome sequencing for rare disorders

Authors :
Molina-Ramírez, Leslie Patricia
Kyle, Claire
Ellingford, Jamie M
Wright, Ronnie
Taylor, Algy
Bhaskar, Sanjeev S
Campbell, Christopher
Jackson, Harriet
Fairclough, Adele
Rousseau, Abigail
Burghel, George J
Dutton, Laura
Banka, Siddharth
Briggs, Tracy A
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Douzgou, Sofia
Jones, Elizabeth A
Kingston, Helen M
Kerr, Bronwyn
Ealing, John
Somarathi, Suresh
Chandler, Kate E
Stuart, Helen M
Burkitt-Wright, Emma MM
Newman, William G
Bruce, Iain A
Black, Graeme C
Gokhale, David
Source :
Journal of Medical Genetics (JMG); 2022, Vol. 59 Issue: 4 p393-398, 6p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

PurposeThe increased adoption of genomic strategies in the clinic makes it imperative for diagnostic laboratories to improve the efficiency of variant interpretation. Clinical exome sequencing (CES) is becoming a valuable diagnostic tool, capable of meeting the diagnostic demand imposed by the vast array of different rare monogenic disorders. We have assessed a clinician-led and phenotype-based approach for virtual gene panel generation for analysis of targeted CES in patients with rare disease in a single institution.MethodsRetrospective survey of 400 consecutive cases presumed by clinicians to have rare monogenic disorders, referred on singleton basis for targeted CES. We evaluated diagnostic yield and variant workload to characterise the usefulness of a clinician-led approach for generation of virtual gene panels that can incorporate up to three different phenotype-driven gene selection methods.ResultsAbnormalities of the nervous system (54.5%), including intellectual disability, head and neck (19%), skeletal system (16%), ear (15%) and eye (15%) were the most common clinical features reported in referrals. Combined phenotype-driven strategies for virtual gene panel generation were used in 57% of cases. On average, 7.3 variants (median=5) per case were retained for clinical interpretation. The overall diagnostic rate of proband-only CES using personalised phenotype-driven virtual gene panels was 24%.ConclusionsOur results show that personalised virtual gene panels are a cost-effective approach for variant analysis of CES, maintaining diagnostic yield and optimising the use of resources for clinical genomic sequencing in the clinic.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222593 and 14686244
Volume :
59
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Genetics (JMG)
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs59232671
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2020-107303