| Literature DB >> 31848469 |
Eva Lenassi1,2, Jill Clayton-Smith1,2, Sofia Douzgou1,2, Simon C Ramsden1,2, Stuart Ingram2, Georgina Hall1,2, Claire L Hardcastle2, Tracy A Fletcher2, Rachel L Taylor1,2, Jamie M Ellingford1,2, William D Newman3, Cecilia Fenerty1,3, Vinod Sharma3, I Chris Lloyd1,4, Susmito Biswas1,3, Jane L Ashworth1,3, Graeme C Black5,6, Panagiotis I Sergouniotis7,8,9.
Abstract
PURPOSE: A key property to consider in all genetic tests is clinical utility, the ability of the test to influence patient management and health outcomes. Here we assess the current clinical utility of genetic testing in diverse pediatric inherited eye disorders (IEDs).Entities:
Keywords: albinism; clinical utility; congenital cataract; inherited eye disease; inherited retinal disease
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31848469 PMCID: PMC7118019 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-019-0722-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Breakdown among diagnostic categories, and percentage of study participants in each category for which a probable molecular diagnosisa could be identified.
| Diagnostic category | Number of probands | Diagnostic yield of genetic testing |
|---|---|---|
| Bilateral pediatric cataracts | 74 | 50% (37/74) |
| Bilateral ectopia lentis | 8 | 75% (6/8) |
| Bilateral ocular anterior segment dysgenesis (including pediatric primary glaucoma) | 28 | 39% (11/28) |
| Albinism | 32 | 91% (29/32) |
| Inherited retinal disease | 59 | 78% (46/59) |
aWe considered probands to have probable molecular diagnosis when they carried clearly or likely pathogenic variant(s) in an apparently disease-causing state (e.g., ≥1 variant in a gene linked with dominant disease or ≥2 variants in a gene linked with recessive disease). Further information can be found in “Materials and Methods” and in Supplementary Table 1.
Genes found to be mutated in ≥1% of the cohort.
| Gene name | Number of probands in the whole cohort | Number of probands in the relevant diagnostic category |
|---|---|---|
| 18/201 | 18/32 | |
| 7/201 | 7/32 | |
| 7/201 | 7/59 | |
| 6/201 | 6/59 | |
| 4/201 | 4/74 | |
| 4/201 | 4/74 | |
| 4/201 | 4/59 | |
| 3/201 | 3/8 | |
| 3/201 | 3/28 | |
| 3/201 | 3/28 | |
| 3/201 | 3/59 | |
| 3/201 | 3/59 | |
| 3/201 | 3/59 | |
| 3/201 | 3/74 |
Number of preschool children with suspected inherited eye disorders for whom genetic testing lead to a clear management change.
| Diagnostic category | Avoiding unnecessary tests | Initiating surveillance for extraocular manifestations | Reducing prognostic uncertainty | Determining eligibility for gene-based therapeutic trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral pediatric cataracts | 50% (37/74)a | 12% (9/74) | – | – |
| Bilateral ectopia lentis | 50% (4/8) | 25% (2/8) | – | – |
| Bilateral ocular anterior segment dysgenesis (including pediatric primary glaucoma) | 4% (1/28) | 4% (1/28) | – | – |
| Albinism | – | 3% (1/32) | – | – |
| Inherited retinal disease | – | 8% (5/59) | 25% (15/59) | 3% (2/59) |
| Overall | 21% (42/201) | 9% (18/201) | 7% (15/201) | 1% (2/201) |
Further information can be found in the illustrative cases presented in “Results” and in Supplementary Table 1.
aThis figure is based on the fact that there was no need to perform the conventional biochemical tests for individuals with a known molecular diagnosis.