Genome sequencing increases diagnostic yield in clinically diagnosed Alagille syndrome patients with previously negative test results
Purpose Detection of all major classes of genomic variants in a single test would decrease cost and increase the efficiency of genomic diagnostics. Genome sequencing (GS) has the potential to provide this level of comprehensive detection. We sought to demonstrate the utility of GS in the molecular d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Genetics in medicine 2021-02, Vol.23 (2), p.323-330 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Detection of all major classes of genomic variants in a single test would decrease cost and increase the efficiency of genomic diagnostics. Genome sequencing (GS) has the potential to provide this level of comprehensive detection. We sought to demonstrate the utility of GS in the molecular diagnosis of 18 patients with clinically defined Alagille syndrome (ALGS), who had a negative or inconclusive result by standard-of-care testing.
Methods
We performed GS on 16 pathogenic variant-negative probands and two probands with inconclusive results (of 406 ALGS probands) and analyzed the data for sequence, copy-number, and structural variants in
JAG1
and
NOTCH2
.
Results
GS identified four novel pathogenic alterations including a copy-neutral inversion, a partial deletion, and a promoter variant in
JAG1
, and a partial
NOTCH2
deletion, for an additional diagnostic yield of 0.9%. Furthermore, GS resolved two complex rearrangements, resulting in identification of a pathogenic variant in 97.5% (
n
= 396/406) of patients after GS.
Conclusion
GS provided an increased diagnostic yield for individuals with clinically defined ALGS who had prior negative or incomplete genetic testing by other methods. Our results show that GS can detect all major classes of variants and has potential to become a single first-tier diagnostic test for Mendelian disorders. |
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ISSN: | 1098-3600 1530-0366 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41436-020-00989-8 |