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Utility of whole‐exome sequencing for those near the end of the diagnostic odyssey: time to address gaps in care

Authors :
Gail E. Graham
David A. Dyment
Chandree L. Beaulieu
Sara L. Sawyer
Mark A. Tarnopolsky
Jane Green
Patrick Frosk
Julie Richer
Victoria Mok Siu
Constantin Polychronakos
Jacques L. Michaud
Francois P. Bernier
Mark E. Samuels
A.M. Innes
Ordan J. Lehmann
Michael T. Geraghty
Taila Hartley
Dennis E. Bulman
Jacek Majewski
Gabriella Horvath
Guy A. Rouleau
Geneviève Bernard
Sarah M. Nikkel
Farah R. Zahir
Aneal Khan
Amanda C. Smith
H M Bedford
Elise Héon
Johnny Deladoëy
Robert M. Gow
L S Penney
Kym M. Boycott
William T. Gibson
Oksana Suchowersky
Bridget A. Fernandez
Roberto Mendoza-Londono
Jeremy Schwartzentruber
Brenda Gerull
Raymond H. Kim
Robert K. Koenekoop
Bernard Brais
Grace Yoon
David Chitayat
Nada Jabado
J. Warman Chardon
Source :
Clinical Genetics
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2015.

Abstract

An accurate diagnosis is an integral component of patient care for children with rare genetic disease. Recent advances in sequencing, in particular whole-exome sequencing (WES), are identifying the genetic basis of disease for 25-40% of patients. The diagnostic rate is probably influenced by when in the diagnostic process WES is used. The Finding Of Rare Disease GEnes (FORGE) Canada project was a nation-wide effort to identify mutations for childhood-onset disorders using WES. Most children enrolled in the FORGE project were toward the end of the diagnostic odyssey. The two primary outcomes of FORGE were novel gene discovery and the identification of mutations in genes known to cause disease. In the latter instance, WES identified mutations in known disease genes for 105 of 362 families studied (29%), thereby informing the impact of WES in the setting of the diagnostic odyssey. Our analysis of this dataset showed that these known disease genes were not identified prior to WES enrollment for two key reasons: genetic heterogeneity associated with a clinical diagnosis and atypical presentation of known, clinically recognized diseases. What is becoming increasingly clear is that WES will be paradigm altering for patients and families with rare genetic diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13990004 and 00099163
Volume :
89
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....693639937bc57ca4fbe1d2a63399ceff