6533b833fe1ef96bd129b882

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Clinical whole-exome sequencing for the diagnosis of rare disorders with congenital anomalies and/or intellectual disability: substantial interest of prospective annual reanalysis

Judith St-ongeAntonio VitobelloPierre VabresNolwenn Jean-marçaisDaphné LehalleCharlotte PoeVirginie CarmignacAnge-line BruelPaul KuentzPatrick CallierJean-baptiste RivièreChristophe PhilippeLaurence FaivreEmilie TisserantSalima El Chehadeh-djebbarFrédéric Tran Mau-themJulien ThevenonYannis DuffourdChristel Thauvin-robinetAlice Masurel-pauletAnne-laure Mosca-boidronThibaud JouanMartin ChevarinSophie NambotMathilde Lefebvre

subject

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsCongenital anomaliesIntellectual disabilityTranslational researchClinical WES dataCongenital Abnormalities03 medical and health sciencesRare DiseasesIntellectual disabilityDatabases GeneticExome SequencingmedicineHumansExomeGenetic Testing[ SDV.GEN.GH ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Human geneticsExomeGenetics (clinical)Exome sequencingGenetic testingRetrospective Studiesmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingRetrospective cohort studySequence Analysis DNAmedicine.diseaseAdditional research3. Good health030104 developmental biology[SDV.GEN.GH]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Human geneticsWhole-exome sequencingPhysical therapyRaw databusiness

description

International audience; PurposeCongenital anomalies and intellectual disability (CA/ID) are a major diagnostic challenge in medical genetics—50% of patients still have no molecular diagnosis after a long and stressful diagnostic “odyssey.” Solo clinical whole-exome sequencing (WES) was applied in our genetics center to improve diagnosis in patients with CA/ID.MethodsThis retrospective study examined 416 consecutive tests performed over 3 years to demonstrate the effectiveness of periodically reanalyzing WES data. The raw data from each nonpositive test was reanalyzed at 12 months with the most recent pipeline and in the light of new data in the literature. The results of the reanalysis for patients enrolled in the third year are not yet available.ResultsOf the 416 patients included, data for 156 without a diagnosis were reanalyzed. We obtained 24 (15.4%) additional diagnoses: 12 through the usual diagnostic process (7 new publications, 4 initially misclassified, and 1 copy-number variant), and 12 through translational research by international data sharing. The final yield of positive results was 27.9% through a strict diagnostic approach, and 2.9% through an additional research strategy.ConclusionThis article highlights the effectiveness of periodically combining diagnostic reinterpretation of clinical WES data with translational research involving data sharing for candidate genes.

https://hal-univ-bourgogne.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01635326