| Literature DB >> 30847515 |
Courtney E French1, Isabelle Delon2, Helen Dolling1, Alba Sanchis-Juan1, Olga Shamardina1, Karyn Mégy1, Stephen Abbs2, Topun Austin2, Sarah Bowdin2, Ricardo G Branco1,2,3, Helen Firth2, David H Rowitch1, F Lucy Raymond4,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: With growing evidence that rare single gene disorders present in the neonatal period, there is a need for rapid, systematic, and comprehensive genomic diagnoses in ICUs to assist acute and long-term clinical decisions. This study aimed to identify genetic conditions in neonatal (NICU) and paediatric (PICU) intensive care populations.Entities:
Keywords: Critically ill children; Genetics; Genomics; NICU; PICU; Whole genome sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30847515 PMCID: PMC6483967 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-019-05552-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Recruitment summary of cohort. Families were recruited from the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) and paediatric neurology or clinical genetics department (N/G)
Summary of recruitment demographics, family structure, and types of mutation reported including mode of inheritance
| Number of probands sequenced | 195 |
|---|---|
| Family structure | Singleton: 3 (1%), Parent + child: 18 (9%), Trio: 169 (87%), Othera: 5 (3%) |
| Gender | Male: 99 (51%), Female: 96 (49%) |
| Recruitment ward | NICUb: 106 (54%), PICU: 61 (31%), |
| Age at recruitment | NICU: 1 day–6 months (median 12 days) |
aIncludes trio + sibling (4) and trio + grandparents (1)
bIncludes two cases from other postnatal wards
cIn addition there is one 23-year-old
dOne case (44) was a duo and likely pathogenic pending confirmation of de novo; one case (138) was a missense VUS in trans with a pathogenic loss of function variant
Fig. 2Impact of diagnosis on each case. Cases are ordered by increasing age. Green, specialist care. Blue, modification of treatment. Yellow, recurrence risk. Red, deceased and/or lethal condition. EIEE early infantile epileptic encephalopathy, Mito. mitochondrial, EI early infantile, NDD neurodevelopmental disorder, ND neurodegeneration
Probands grouped by phenotype similarity
| Ward | Group(s) | Diagnostic rate | Number of probands | Enriched phenotypesa | Diagnosed genes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NICU | 1 | 100% | 2 | Hypertelorism, Talipes |
|
| 2 | 50% | 4 | None significant. Top hitsb: Abnormal renal physiology, Abnormal urine output |
| |
| 3 | 50% | 2 | Abnormal heart valve morphology |
| |
| 4 | 33% | 3 | Cleft palate, Micrognathia | 16 Mb deletion | |
| 5–10 | 10–25% (avg. 17%) | 4–15 (avg. 8) | 5: Abnormal vascular physiologyb; 6: Abnormal morphology of the great vesselsb; 7: Abnormality of the nervous system; 8: Tachypnoea; 9: Decreased body weight; 10: Sepsis | ||
| 11–15 | 0% | 4–14 (avg. 9) | 11: Abnormality of nervous system physiology (HIE); 12: Hyperglycaemiab; 13: Abnormality of the amniotic fluid; 14: Meconium-stained amniotic fluid; 15: Ventriculomegaly | – | |
| PICU | 1 | 50% | 4 | None significant. Top hitb: Abnormality of the amniotic fluid | |
| 2 | 50% | 2 | None significant. Top hitb: Lactic acidosis |
| |
| 3 | 40% | 5 | Cerebral palsy |
| |
| 4 | 36% | 11 | Abnormality of body height, Abnormality of skull size, Short stature |
| |
| 5 | 33% | 3 | Ventilator dependence with inability to wean |
| |
| 6–8 | 13–25% (avg. 20%) | 4–15 (avg. 9) | 6: Congenital malformation of the great arteries; 7: Feeding difficultiesb; | ||
| 9–11 | 0% | 2–4 (avg. 3) | 9: Functional respiratory abnormalityb; 10: Joint hypermobility; 11: Prolonged neonatal jaundice | – |
aPhenotypes significantly enriched in group over cohort from ward (Fisher’s exact test, FDR < 0.1) and found in at least half of the probands in the group. Simplified for ontology redundancy. For rows representing multiple groups, the most descriptive terms are listed for each
bMost enriched term in a group with no significantly enriched terms
cGene only partially explains phenotype
Fig. 3Bar chart showing where the diagnosed gene ranked in phenotype similarity score to the proband, compared to all 3926 HPO-typed genes in OMIM. The white bar indicates that the diagnosed gene was only recently reported and not yet HPO-typed. An asterisk (*) indicates that the gene only partially explained the phenotype. Families 111 and 170 are not included because both are large deletions where a specific gene has not been implicated. Red, under 1 month old at recruitment. Purple, 1 month–1 year old at recruitment. Blue, over 1 year old at recruitment
| Children in intensive care frequently have a rare underlying genetic condition. Rapid genetic testing reveals a diagnosis in ~20% of case, but the clinical presentation is often atypical. Greater than 65% of diagnoses resulted in modification of treatments or care pathways and a 2–3 week diagnostic pipeline was sufficient to impact most clinical decision making. |