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Benefits for children with suspected cancer from routine whole-genome sequencing

Authors :
Hodder, Angus
Leiter, Sarah M.
Kennedy, Jonathan
Addy, Dilys
Ahmed, Munaza
Ajithkumar, Thankamma
Allinson, Kieren
Ancliff, Phil
Bailey, Shivani
Barnard, Gemma
Burke, G. A. Amos
Burns, Charlotte
Cano-Flanagan, Julian
Chalker, Jane
Coleman, Nicholas
Cheng, Danny
Clinch, Yasmin
Dryden, Caryl
Ghorashian, Sara
Griffin, Blanche
Horan, Gail
Hubank, Michael
May, Phillippa
McDerra, Joanna
Nagrecha, Rajvi
Nicholson, James
O’Connor, David
Pavasovic, Vesna
Quaegebeur, Annelies
Rao, Anupama
Roberts, Thomas
Samarasinghe, Sujith
Stasevich, Iryna
Tadross, John A.
Trayers, Claire
Trotman, Jamie
Vora, Ajay
Watkins, James
Chitty, Lyn S.
Bowdin, Sarah
Armstrong, Ruth
Murray, Matthew J.
Hook, Catherine E.
Tarpey, Patrick
Vedi, Aditi
Bartram, Jack
Behjati, Sam
Source :
Nature Medicine; 20240101, Issue: Preprints p1-8, 8p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Clinical whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has been shown to deliver potential benefits to children with cancer and to alter treatment in high-risk patient groups. It remains unknown whether offering WGS to every child with suspected cancer can change patient management. We collected WGS variant calls and clinical and diagnostic information from 281 children (282 tumors) across two English units (n= 152 from a hematology center, n= 130 from a solid tumor center) where WGS had become a routine test. Our key finding was that variants uniquely attributable to WGS changed the management in ~7% (20 out of 282) of cases while providing additional disease-relevant findings, beyond standard-of-care molecular tests, in 108 instances for 83 (29%) cases. Furthermore, WGS faithfully reproduced every standard-of-care molecular test (n= 738) and revealed several previously unknown genomic features of childhood tumors. We show that WGS can be delivered as part of routine clinical care to children with suspected cancer and can change clinical management by delivering unexpected genomic insights. Our experience portrays WGS as a clinically impactful assay for routine practice, providing opportunities for assay consolidation and for delivery of molecularly informed patient care.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956 and 1546170X
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs66823955
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03056-w