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Discordant results between conventional newborn screening and genomic sequencing in the BabySeq Project

Authors :
Monica H. Wojcik
Tian Zhang
Ozge Ceyhan-Birsoy
Casie A. Genetti
Matthew S. Lebo
Timothy W. Yu
Richard B. Parad
Ingrid A. Holm
Heidi L. Rehm
Alan H. Beggs
Robert C. Green
Pankaj B. Agrawal
Wendi N. Betting
Kurt D. Christensen
Dmitry Dukhovny
Shawn Fayer
Leslie A. Frankel
Chet Graham
Amanda M. Guiterrez
Maegan Harden
Joel B. Krier
Harvey L. Levy
Xingquan Lu
Kalotina Machini
Amy L. McGuire
Jaclyn B. Murry
Medha Naik
Tiffany T. Nguyen
Hayley A. Peoples
Stacey Pereira
Devan Petersen
Uma Ramamurthy
Vivek Ramanathan
Amy Roberts
Jill O. Robinson
Serguei Roumiantsev
Talia S. Schwartz
Tina K. Truong
Grace E. VanNoy
Susan E. Waisbren
Source :
Genet Med
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose Newborn screening (NBS) is performed to identify neonates at risk for actionable, severe, early-onset disorders, many of which are genetic. The BabySeq Project randomized neonates to receive conventional NBS or NBS plus exome sequencing (ES) capable of detecting sequence variants that may also diagnose monogenic disease or indicate genetic disease risk. We therefore evaluated how ES and conventional NBS results differ in this population. Methods We compared results of NBS (including hearing screens) and ES for 159 infants in the BabySeq Project. Infants were considered "NBS positive" if any abnormal result was found indicating disease risk and "ES positive" if ES identified a monogenic disease risk or a genetic diagnosis. Results Most infants (132/159, 84%) were NBS and ES negative. Only one infant was positive for the same disorder by both modalities. Nine infants were NBS positive/ES negative, though seven of these were subsequently determined to be false positives. Fifteen infants were ES positive/NBS negative, all of which represented risk of genetic conditions that are not included in NBS programs. No genetic explanation was identified for eight infants referred on the hearing screen. Conclusion These differences highlight the complementarity of information that may be gleaned from NBS and ES in the newborn period.

Details

ISSN :
15300366
Volume :
23
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9288dd36de1e43b2de12db9508078a18