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IGenomic answers for children: Dynamic analyses of >1000 pediatric rare disease genomes

Authors :
Jill Jacobson
Keith A Coffman
Susan S Hughes
Caitlin Lawson
Erin D Fecske
Ahmed T Abdelmoity
Thuy Tien T Dang
Annapoorna Nair
Janda L Jenkins
Kendra L Engleman
Daniel A Louiselle
Orion Buske
Nigel Price
Dihong Zhou
Michael Lypka
Courtney D Berrios
Laura Mb Puckett
Kelsee Halpin
Ana Sa Cohen
Nikita Raje
Aaron M Wenger
Emily G Farrow
Keely Fitzgerald
Mohammed Ilyas
Kailash Pawar
Joseph T Alaimo
Jennifer L Gannon
Laurel K Willig
Jean-Baptiste Le Pichon
Shivarajan M Amudhavalli
Christopher M Oermann
Rebecca L Biswell
Shelby H Neal
Lalit Bansal
Elizabeth Shaffer
Brittany D McDonald
Bonnie R Sullivan
Isabelle Thiffault
Christine Lambert
Ashley M Cooper
Suzanne M Herd
Holly Welsh
Julio F Quezada
Carol J Saunders
Caitlin Schwager
Brian S Harvey
Adam M Walter
Donna M Pacicca
Jennifer Kussmann
Rose N Gelineau-Morel
Margaret Gibson
Elin Grundberg
Shao Jiang
Scott T Younger
Steve Leeder
Richard M Schwend
John T Anderson
Venkatesh Sampath
Jonas Korlach
Bryce A Heese
Meghan E Strenk
Neil Miller
Vicki C Little
Ann Modrcin
Brooke R Sweeney
Randi N Gadea
Nyshele L Posey
Emily A Fleming
Wendy Hein
Cynthia Fieser
Eric T Rush
Laura A Cross
Craig Smail
William J Rowell
Kathryn Keeler
Jeffrey Goldstein
Tricia N Zion
Warren A. Cheung
Sarah Soden
Lauren Bartik
Bradley Belden
Thomas Curran
Pawel Buczkowicz
Shreyasee Chakraborty
Yun Yan
Tomi Pastinen
Primo Baybayan
Mary M Elfrink
Jeffrey J Johnston
Jade B Tam-Williams
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

PURPOSETo provide comprehensive diagnostic and candidate analyses in a pediatric rare disease cohort through the Genomic Answers for Kids (GA4K) program.METHODSExtensive analyses of 960 families with suspected genetic disorders including short-read exome (ES) and genome sequencing (srGS); PacBio HiFi long-read GS (HiFi-GS); variant calling for small-nucleotide (SNV), structural (SV) and repeat variants; and machine-learning variant prioritization. Structured phenotypes, prioritized variants and pedigrees are stored in PhenoTips database, with data sharing through controlled access (dbGAP).RESULTSDiagnostic rates ranged from 11% for cases with prior negative genetic tests to 34.5% in naïve patients. Incorporating SVs from GS added up to 13% of new diagnoses in previously unsolved cases. HiFi-GS yielded increased discovery rate with >4-fold more rare coding SVs than srGS. Variants and genes of unknown significance (VUS/GUS) remain the most common finding (58% of non-diagnostic cases).CONCLUSIONComputational prioritization is efficient for diagnostic SNVs. Thorough identification of non-SNVs remains challenging and is partly mitigated by HiFi-GS sequencing. Importantly, community research is supported by sharing real-time data to accelerate gene validation, and by providing HiFi variant (SNV/SV) resources from >1,000 human alleles to facilitate implementation of new sequencing platforms for rare disease diagnoses.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b55ee732f1ec32f314eebddcd46b6b25