| Literature DB >> 31847883 |
Elias L Salfati1, Emily G Spencer1, Sarah E Topol1, Evan D Muse1,2, Manuel Rueda1, Jonathan R Lucas3, Glenn N Wagner4, Steven Campman4, Eric J Topol1,2, Ali Torkamani5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) has become an efficient diagnostic test for patients with likely monogenic conditions such as rare idiopathic diseases or sudden unexplained death. Yet, many cases remain undiagnosed. Here, we report the added diagnostic yield achieved for 101 WES cases re-analyzed 1 to 7 years after initial analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Automated periodic re-analysis; Medical genetics; Molecular autopsy; Rare and undiagnosed diseases; Sudden death; Whole-exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847883 PMCID: PMC6916453 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-019-0702-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Diagnostic variant observed following exome filtering and interpretative assessment after re-analysis
| ID00024 | ID00038 | ID00048 | MA02003 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case description and initial exome analysis | ||||
| Primary clinical features at referral | Seizures; decreased white brain matter; neuropathy | Global developmental delay; microcephaly; intellectual disability | Short stature with deformities of lower extremities; muscle tone decreased throughout; spine with mild scoliosis | History of depressive disorder and anxiety; seizures; sudden death |
| Exome quality metrics | Average coverage: 83.7X | Average coverage: 101.3X | Average coverage: 78X | Average coverage: 118X |
| % of covered bases at ≥ 20x: 93.8% | % of covered bases at ≥ 20x: 92.4% | % of covered bases at ≥ 20x: 94% | % of covered bases at ≥ 20x: 95.7% | |
| Initial exome interpretation | No clinically relevant variant (2015) | No clinically relevant variant (2016) | No clinically relevant variant (2017) | No clinically relevant variant (2016) |
| Exome reanalysis | ||||
| Candidate variant (Hg19) | chr1:154,560,601 G > A | chr12:109,921,417 G > T; chr12:109,948,147 A > G | chr17:76,993,476 A > AG; chr17:76991236 C > A | chr12:111,348,980 G > C |
| HGVS Nomenclature | NM_001111.5 ( | NM_130466.4 ( | NM_001159773.2 ( | NM_000432.3 ( |
| ACMG/AMP Criteria | PS1- strong; PS3-strong; PM2-moderate | PVS1 (c.1742-2A>G; c.61G>T); PS1- strong ( | PVS1 (c.228dupC); PS3- strong ( | PVS1; PS3- strong; PM2-moderate |
| Re-analysis assessment | Pathogenic (DV) | Pathogenic (DV; | Pathogenic (DV; c.228dupC); possibly pathogenic (PDV; | Pathogenic (DV) |
| Diagnosis (OMIM) | Aicardi-Goutieres Syndrome 6 (615010) [ | Kaufman Oculocerebrofacial Syndrome (244450) [ | Multiple epiphyseal dysplasia 7 (617719); Desbuquois dysplasia 1 (251450) [ | Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy 10 (608758) [ |
| Prognosis | Heterogeneous disease characterized by cerebral atrophy, leukoencephalopathy, intracranial calcifications, chronic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lymphocytosis, increased CSF alpha-interferon. Death often occurs in early childhood. | Unusually small head size (microcephaly), structural abnormalities of the brain. Affected individuals have weak muscle tone (hypotonia) and are delayed in developing motor skills such as walking. Intellectual disability is severe or profound. | Mixture of the features observed in MED and DD. MED is a disorder of cartilage and bone development, primarily affecting the ends of the long bones in the arms and legs. DD is a more severe form of chondrodysplasia overall. | Alteration of cardiac contraction which provoked changes in myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity, subsequently it could lead to diastolic dysfunction and sensitivity to dysrhythmias, which at times cause sudden death. |