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Secondary actionable findings identified by exome sequencing: expected impact on the organisation of care from the study of 700 consecutive tests

Authors :
Aurore Pélissier
Anne-Laure Mosca-Boidron
Thibaud Jouan
Elodie Cretin
Maxime Luu
Pierre Vabres
Jean-François Deleuze
Chritine Peyron
Nolwenn Jean-Marçais
Julien Thevenon
Christine Binquet
Frédéric Tran Mau-Them
Ange-Line Bruel
Patrick Callier
Elodie Gautier
Laurent Demougeot
Daphné Lehalle
Christophe Philippe
Paul Kuentz
Martin Chevarin
Sophie Nambot
Aline Chassagne
Charlotte Poe
Christel Thauvin-Robinet
Mathilde Lefebvre
Marc Bardou
Céline Verstuyft
Antonio Vitobello
Laurence Faivre
Julian Delanne
Emilie Tisserant
Arthur Sorlin
Yannis Duffourd
Source :
Eur J Hum Genet
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

With exome/genome sequencing (ES/GS) integrated into the practice of medicine, there is some potential for reporting incidental/secondary findings (IFs/SFs). The issue of IFs/SFs has been studied extensively over the last 4 years. In order to evaluate their implications in care organisation, we retrospectively evaluated, in a cohort of 700 consecutive probands, the frequency and burden of introducing the search for variants in a maximum list of 244 medically actionable genes (genes that predispose carriers to a preventable or treatable disease in childhood/adulthood and genes for genetic counselling issues). We also focused on the 59 PharmGKB class IA/IB pharmacogenetic variants. We also compared the results in different gene lists. We identified variants (likely) affecting protein function in genes for care in 26 cases (3.7%) and heterozygous variants in genes for genetic counselling in 29 cases (3.8%). Mean time for the 700 patients was about 6.3 min/patient for medically actionable genes and 1.3 min/patient for genes for genetic counselling, and a mean time of 37 min/patients for the reinterpreted variants. These results would lead to all 700 pre-test counselling sessions being longer, to 55 post-test genetic consultations and to 27 secondary specialised medical evaluations. ES also detected 42/59 pharmacogenetic variants or combinations of variants in the majority of cases. An extremely low metabolizer status in genes relevant for neurodevelopmental disorders (CYP2C9 and CYP2C19) was found in 57/700 cases. This study provides information regarding the need to anticipate the implementation of genomic medicine, notably the work overload at various steps of the process.

Details

ISSN :
14765438 and 10184813
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2162481c2d8767a5f4709b3ec786978