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Structural and non-coding variants increase the diagnostic yield of clinical whole genome sequencing for rare diseases

Authors :
Alistair T. Pagnamenta
Carme Camps
Edoardo Giacopuzzi
John M. Taylor
Mona Hashim
Eduardo Calpena
Pamela J. Kaisaki
Akiko Hashimoto
Jing Yu
Edward Sanders
Ron Schwessinger
Jim R. Hughes
Gerton Lunter
Helene Dreau
Matteo Ferla
Lukas Lange
Yesim Kesim
Vassilis Ragoussis
Dimitrios V. Vavoulis
Holger Allroggen
Olaf Ansorge
Christian Babbs
Siddharth Banka
Benito Baños-Piñero
David Beeson
Tal Ben-Ami
David L. Bennett
Celeste Bento
Edward Blair
Charlotte Brasch-Andersen
Katherine R. Bull
Holger Cario
Deirdre Cilliers
Valerio Conti
E. Graham Davies
Fatima Dhalla
Beatriz Diez Dacal
Yin Dong
James E. Dunford
Renzo Guerrini
Adrian L. Harris
Jane Hartley
Georg Hollander
Kassim Javaid
Maureen Kane
Deirdre Kelly
Dominic Kelly
Samantha J. L. Knight
Alexandra Y. Kreins
Erika M. Kvikstad
Craig B. Langman
Tracy Lester
Kate E. Lines
Simon R. Lord
Xin Lu
Sahar Mansour
Adnan Manzur
Reza Maroofian
Brian Marsden
Joanne Mason
Simon J. McGowan
Davide Mei
Hana Mlcochova
Yoshiko Murakami
Andrea H. Németh
Steven Okoli
Elizabeth Ormondroyd
Lilian Bomme Ousager
Jacqueline Palace
Smita Y. Patel
Melissa M. Pentony
Chris Pugh
Aboulfazl Rad
Archana Ramesh
Simone G. Riva
Irene Roberts
Noémi Roy
Outi Salminen
Kyleen D. Schilling
Caroline Scott
Arjune Sen
Conrad Smith
Mark Stevenson
Rajesh V. Thakker
Stephen R. F. Twigg
Holm H. Uhlig
Richard van Wijk
Barbara Vona
Steven Wall
Jing Wang
Hugh Watkins
Jaroslav Zak
Anna H. Schuh
Usha Kini
Andrew O. M. Wilkie
Niko Popitsch
Jenny C. Taylor
Source :
Genome Medicine, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-25 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMC, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Background Whole genome sequencing is increasingly being used for the diagnosis of patients with rare diseases. However, the diagnostic yields of many studies, particularly those conducted in a healthcare setting, are often disappointingly low, at 25–30%. This is in part because although entire genomes are sequenced, analysis is often confined to in silico gene panels or coding regions of the genome. Methods We undertook WGS on a cohort of 122 unrelated rare disease patients and their relatives (300 genomes) who had been pre-screened by gene panels or arrays. Patients were recruited from a broad spectrum of clinical specialties. We applied a bioinformatics pipeline that would allow comprehensive analysis of all variant types. We combined established bioinformatics tools for phenotypic and genomic analysis with our novel algorithms (SVRare, ALTSPLICE and GREEN-DB) to detect and annotate structural, splice site and non-coding variants. Results Our diagnostic yield was 43/122 cases (35%), although 47/122 cases (39%) were considered solved when considering novel candidate genes with supporting functional data into account. Structural, splice site and deep intronic variants contributed to 20/47 (43%) of our solved cases. Five genes that are novel, or were novel at the time of discovery, were identified, whilst a further three genes are putative novel disease genes with evidence of causality. We identified variants of uncertain significance in a further fourteen candidate genes. The phenotypic spectrum associated with RMND1 was expanded to include polymicrogyria. Two patients with secondary findings in FBN1 and KCNQ1 were confirmed to have previously unidentified Marfan and long QT syndromes, respectively, and were referred for further clinical interventions. Clinical diagnoses were changed in six patients and treatment adjustments made for eight individuals, which for five patients was considered life-saving. Conclusions Genome sequencing is increasingly being considered as a first-line genetic test in routine clinical settings and can make a substantial contribution to rapidly identifying a causal aetiology for many patients, shortening their diagnostic odyssey. We have demonstrated that structural, splice site and intronic variants make a significant contribution to diagnostic yield and that comprehensive analysis of the entire genome is essential to maximise the value of clinical genome sequencing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1756994X
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Genome Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9f00f4d0c70402d8c69f3f7e4981fbc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-023-01240-0