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Bridging clinical care and research in Ontario, Canada: Maximizing diagnoses from reanalysis of clinical exome sequencing data

Authors :
Taila, Hartley
Élisabeth, Soubry
Meryl, Acker
Matthew, Osmond
Madeline, Couse
Meredith K, Gillespie
Yoko, Ito
Aren E, Marshall
Gabrielle, Lemire
Lijia, Huang
Caitlin, Chisholm
Alison J, Eaton
E Magda, Price
James J, Dowling
Arun K, Ramani
Roberto, Mendoza-Londono
Gregory, Costain
Michelle M, Axford
Anna, Szuto
Vanda, McNiven
Nadirah, Damseh
Rebekah, Jobling
Leanne, de Kock
Bahareh A, Mojarad
Ted, Young
Zhuo, Shao
Robin Z, Hayeems
Ian D, Graham
Mark, Tarnopolsky
Lauren, Brady
Christine M, Armour
Michael, Geraghty
Julie, Richer
Sarah, Sawyer
Matthew, Lines
Saadet, Mercimek-Andrews
Melissa T, Carter
Gail, Graham
Peter, Kannu
Joanna, Lazier
Chumei, Li
Ritu B, Aul
Tugce B, Balci
Nomazulu, Dlamini
Lauren, Badalato
Andrea, Guerin
Jagdeep, Walia
David, Chitayat
Ronald, Cohn
Hanna, Faghfoury
Cynthia, Forster-Gibson
Hernan, Gonorazky
Eyal, Grunebaum
Michal, Inbar-Feigenberg
Natalya, Karp
Chantal, Morel
Alison, Rusnak
Neal, Sondheimer
Jodi, Warman-Chardon
Priya T, Bhola
Danielle K, Bourque
Inara J, Chacon
Lauren, Chad
Pranesh, Chakraborty
Karen, Chong
Asif, Doja
Elaine Suk-Ying, Goh
Maha, Saleh
Beth K, Potter
Christian R, Marshall
David A, Dyment
Kristin, Kernohan
Kym M, Boycott
Source :
Clinical geneticsREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We examined the utility of clinical and research processes in the reanalysis of publicly-funded clinical exome sequencing data in Ontario, Canada. In partnership with eight sites, we recruited 287 families with suspected rare genetic diseases tested between 2014 and 2020. Data from seven laboratories was reanalyzed with the referring clinicians. Reanalysis of clinically relevant genes identified diagnoses in 4% (13/287); four were missed by clinical testing. Translational research methods, including analysis of novel candidate genes, identified candidates in 21% (61/287). Of these, 24 families have additional evidence through data sharing to support likely diagnoses (8% of cohort). This study indicates few diagnoses are missed by clinical laboratories, the incremental gain from reanalysis of clinically-relevant genes is modest, and the highest yield comes from validation of novel disease-gene associations. Future implementation of translational research methods, including continued reporting of compelling genes of uncertain significance by clinical laboratories, should be considered to maximize diagnoses.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics
Genetics (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
13990004
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical geneticsREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d43914a0085155fda4b28bec371c16c8