Best practices for the analytical validation of clinical whole-genome sequencing intended for the diagnosis of germline disease

Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has shown promise in becoming a first-tier diagnostic test for patients with rare genetic disorders; however, standards addressing the definition and deployment practice of a best-in-class test are lacking. To address these gaps, the Medical Genome Initiative, a consort...

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Veröffentlicht in:Npj genomic medicine 2020-10, Vol.5 (1), p.47-47, Article 47
Hauptverfasser: Marshall, Christian R., Chowdhury, Shimul, Taft, Ryan J., Lebo, Mathew S., Buchan, Jillian G., Harrison, Steven M., Rowsey, Ross, Klee, Eric W., Liu, Pengfei, Worthey, Elizabeth A., Jobanputra, Vaidehi, Dimmock, David, Kearney, Hutton M., Bick, David, Kulkarni, Shashikant, Taylor, Stacie L., Belmont, John W., Stavropoulos, Dimitri J., Lennon, Niall J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has shown promise in becoming a first-tier diagnostic test for patients with rare genetic disorders; however, standards addressing the definition and deployment practice of a best-in-class test are lacking. To address these gaps, the Medical Genome Initiative, a consortium of leading healthcare and research organizations in the US and Canada, was formed to expand access to high-quality clinical WGS by publishing best practices. Here, we present consensus recommendations on clinical WGS analytical validation for the diagnosis of individuals with suspected germline disease with a focus on test development, upfront considerations for test design, test validation practices, and metrics to monitor test performance. This work also provides insight into the current state of WGS testing at each member institution, including the utilization of reference and other standards across sites. Importantly, members of this initiative strongly believe that clinical WGS is an appropriate first-tier test for patients with rare genetic disorders, and at minimum is ready to replace chromosomal microarray analysis and whole-exome sequencing. The recommendations presented here should reduce the burden on laboratories introducing WGS into clinical practice, and support safe and effective WGS testing for diagnosis of germline disease.
ISSN:2056-7944
2056-7944
DOI:10.1038/s41525-020-00154-9