| Literature DB >> 20398301 |
Joo Wook Ahn1, Kathy Mann, Sally Walsh, Marwa Shehab, Sarah Hoang, Zoe Docherty, Shehla Mohammed, Caroline Mackie Ogilvie.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several studies have demonstrated that array comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) for genome-wide imbalance provides a substantial increase in diagnostic yield for patients traditionally referred for karyotyping by G-banded chromosome analysis. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of and strategies for, the use of array CGH in place of karyotyping for genome imbalance, and to report on the results of the implementation of this approach.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20398301 PMCID: PMC2885406 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8166-3-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cytogenet ISSN: 1755-8166 Impact factor: 2.009
Figure 1Array CGH diagnostic service workflow. This example illustrates the diagnostic workflow for two patients, one of whom has a previously undetected imbalance of potential clinical significance. Yellow shading signifies automated procedures (we plan to also automate labelling, hybridisation and washing).
Patients tested on BAC and oligo array platforms with concordant results.
| Patient | BAC array result | Oligo array result |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2q33.1 × 3 (0.3-1.7 Mb) | 2q33.1 × 3 (0.6 Mb) |
| 2 | 7p12.1 × 3 (0.2-2.6 Mb) | 7p12.1 × 3 (0.8 Mb) |
| 3 | 14q12 × 3 (0.2-2.1 Mb) | 14q12 × 3 (0.4 Mb) |
| 4 | 19q12 × 1 (0.2-1.8 Mb) | 19q12 × 1 (0.7 Mb) |
| 5 | Xp22.12p22.13 × 3 (0.8-2.0 Mb) | Xp22.12p22.13 × 3 (0.8 Mb) |
| 6 | Xp11.22 × 2 (0.2-1.6 Mb) | Xp11.22 × 2 (0.3 Mb) |
Patients tested on BAC and oligo array platforms with discordant results.
| Patient | BAC array result | Oligo array result |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | None | 1q44 × 3 (0.3 Mb) |
| 2 | None | 9q33 × 1 (0.2 Mb) |
| 3 | 19q13 × 3 (0.2 Mb) | 14q32 × 3 (0.2 Mb), |
| 4 | None | 16p11 × 1 (3.0 Mb) |
| 5 | None | 16p11 × 3 (0.2 Mb) |
| 6 | None | 17p13 × 3 (0.5 Mb) |
Results from diagnostic service.
| All oligo arrays | Oligo arrays following normal karyotype | Oligo arrays as first line test | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total patients | 2414 | 1245 | 1169 |
| Abnormal patients | 585 (24%) | 325 (26%) | 260 (22%) |
| - inherited | 169 | 97 | 72 |
| - de novo | 63 | 52 | 11 |
| - unknown inheritance | 353 | 176 | 177 |
Imbalances detected during diagnostic service (some patients carried more than one region of imbalance).
| All oligo arrays | Oligo arrays following normal karyotype | Oligo arrays as first line test | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total imbalances | 715 | 404 | 311 |
| - deletion | 374 | 223 | 151 |
| - duplication | 300 | 155 | 145 |
| - triplication | 27 | 18 | 9 |
| - marker | 1 | 1 | |
| - whole chromosome | 13 (incl. 7 mosaic) | 8 (incl. 3 mosaic) | 5 (incl. 4 mosaic) |
Figure 2Comparison of . Proportion of de novo findings in first line array CGH and post-normal karyotype array CGH cohorts. Higher rates of de novo findings in the post-normal karyotype cohort reflect the stringent clinical selection of these patients; these patients would have been diagnosed at an earlier stage had array CGH been carried out as the first line test.