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A prospective evaluation of whole-exome sequencing as a first-tier molecular test in infants with suspected monogenic disorders

Authors :
Dylan A. Mordaunt
Richard J. Leventer
Emma Creed
Alison Yeung
Shannon Cowie
Lilian Downie
Susan M. White
Belinda Chong
George McGillivray
Simon Sadedin
David J. Amor
Zornitza Stark
Peter Georgeson
Joy Yaplito-Lee
Ivan Macciocca
Katrina M. Bell
Paul G Ekert
Alicia Oshlack
Christiane Theda
Ravi Savarirayan
Paul A. James
Charlotte Anderson
Heidi Peters
Natalie P. Thorne
Gemma R Brett
Maie Walsh
Monique M. Ryan
Patrick Yap
Tiong Yang Tan
Clara Gaff
Source :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics. 18(11)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

To prospectively evaluate the diagnostic and clinical utility of singleton whole-exome sequencing (WES) as a first-tier test in infants with suspected monogenic disease. Singleton WES was performed as a first-tier sequencing test in infants recruited from a single pediatric tertiary center. This occurred in parallel with standard investigations, including single- or multigene panel sequencing when clinically indicated. The diagnosis rate, clinical utility, and impact on management of singleton WES were evaluated. Of 80 enrolled infants, 46 received a molecular genetic diagnosis through singleton WES (57.5%) compared with 11 (13.75%) who underwent standard investigations in the same patient group. Clinical management changed following exome diagnosis in 15 of 46 diagnosed participants (32.6%). Twelve relatives received a genetic diagnosis following cascade testing, and 28 couples were identified as being at high risk of recurrence in future pregnancies. This prospective study provides strong evidence for increased diagnostic and clinical utility of singleton WES as a first-tier sequencing test for infants with a suspected monogenic disorder. Singleton WES outperformed standard care in terms of diagnosis rate and the benefits of a diagnosis, namely, impact on management of the child and clarification of reproductive risks for the extended family in a timely manner. Genet Med 18 11, 1090–1096.

Details

ISSN :
15300366
Volume :
18
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd761141c1bfae64293f40a4728b9ac1