Comparison of first‐tier whole‐exome sequencing with a multi‐step traditional approach for diagnosing paediatric outpatients: An Italian prospective study

Background The recent guidelines suggest the use of genome‐wide analyses, such as whole exome sequencing (WES), at the beginning of the diagnostic approach for cases with suspected genetic conditions. However, in many realities it still provides for the execution of a multi‐step pathway, thus requir...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine 2024-01, Vol.12 (1), p.e2316-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Rosina, Erica, Pezzani, Lidia, Apuril, Erika, Pezzoli, Laura, Marchetti, Daniela, Bellini, Matteo, Lucca, Camilla, Meossi, Camilla, Massimello, Marta, Mariani, Milena, Scatigno, Agnese, Cattaneo, Elisa, Colombo, Lorenzo, Maitz, Silvia, Cereda, Anna, Milani, Donatella, Spaccini, Luigina, Bedeschi, Maria Francesca, Selicorni, Angelo, Iascone, Maria
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The recent guidelines suggest the use of genome‐wide analyses, such as whole exome sequencing (WES), at the beginning of the diagnostic approach for cases with suspected genetic conditions. However, in many realities it still provides for the execution of a multi‐step pathway, thus requiring several genetic tests to end the so‐called ‘diagnostic odyssey’. Methods We reported the results of GENE Project (Genomic analysis Evaluation NEtwork): a multicentre prospective cohort study on 125 paediatric outpatients with a suspected genetic disease in which we performed first‐tier trio‐WES, including exome‐based copy number variation analysis, in parallel to a ‘traditional approach’ of two/three sequential genetic tests. Results First‐tier trio‐WES detected a conclusive diagnosis in 41.6% of patients, way above what was found with routine genetic testing (25%), with a time‐to‐result of about 50 days. Notably, the study showed that 44% of WES‐reached diagnoses would be missed with the traditional approach. The diagnostic rate (DR) of the two approaches varied in relation to the phenotypic class of referral and to the proportion of cases with a defined diagnostic suspect, proving the major difference for neurodevelopmental disorders. Moreover, trio‐WES analysis detected variants in candidate genes of unknown significance (EPHA4, DTNA, SYNCRIP, NCOR1, TFDP1, SPRED3, EDA2R, PHF12, PPP1R12A, WDR91, CDC42BPG, CSNK1D, EIF3H, TMEM63B, RIPPLY3) in 19.4% of undiagnosed cases. Conclusion Our findings represent real‐practice evidence of how first‐tier genome‐wide sequencing tests significantly improve the DR for paediatric outpatients with a suspected underlying genetic aetiology, thereby allowing a time‐saving setting of the correct management, follow‐up and family planning.
ISSN:2324-9269
2324-9269
DOI:10.1002/mgg3.2316