Literature DB >> 33223529

Parental exome analysis identifies shared carrier status for a second recessive disorder in couples with an affected child.

Hagar Mor-Shaked1, Jonathan Rips2, Shiri Gershon Naamat1, Avichai Reich1, Orly Elpeleg1, Vardiella Meiner1, Tamar Harel3.   

Abstract

Consanguinity, commonplace in many regions around the globe, is associated with an increased risk of autosomal recessive (AR) genetic disorders. Consequently, consanguineous couples undergoing preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) for one Mendelian disorder may be at increased risk for a child with a second, unrelated AR genetic disorder. We examined the yield of exome analysis for carrier screening of additional AR disorders, beyond the primary diagnosis, amongst consanguineous vs. non-consanguineous populations. Parental samples from trio exomes of 102 consanguineous families and 105 non-consanguineous controls were evaluated for shared carrier status, after disregarding the primary molecular diagnosis. Results were sub-classified according to disease severity. Secondary shared carrier status for pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants leading to AR disorders of moderate to profound severity was identified in 10/102 (9.8%) consanguineous couples, as compared to 1/105 (0.95%) non-consanguineous couples (χ2 = 8.0565, p value < 0.005). Higher inbreeding coefficient values, calculated from individual exomes, correlated with secondary shared carrier status for diseases of moderate to profound severity (r = 0.17, p value < 0.0125). Our results indicate that consanguineous couples undergoing PGD are at increased risk for a second genetic disease of moderate to profound severity. This study represents an underestimate of the rate of secondary shared carrier status due to inability to detect deep intronic variants, no assessment of copy number variants, and false negative results stemming from stringent variant interpretation. False positive results may result from inaccuracies in public databases. Additional studies in consanguineous populations will determine whether exome-based carrier screening should be recommended to all couples undergoing PGD.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autosomal recessive; Carrier screening; Consanguineous; Exome sequencing; Preimplantation genetic diagnosis; Secondary findings

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33223529      PMCID: PMC7940654          DOI: 10.1038/s41431-020-00756-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet        ISSN: 1018-4813            Impact factor:   4.246


  1 in total

1.  High diagnostic rate of trio exome sequencing in consanguineous families with neurogenetic diseases.

Authors:  Semra Hiz Kurul; Yavuz Oktay; Ana Töpf; Nóra Zs Szabó; Serdal Güngör; Ahmet Yaramis; Ece Sonmezler; Leslie Matalonga; Uluc Yis; Katherine Schon; Ida Paramonov; İpek Polat Kalafatcilar; Fei Gao; Aliz Rieger; Nur Arslan; Elmasnur Yilmaz; Burcu Ekinci; Pinar Pulat Edem; Mahmut Aslan; Bilge Özgör; Angela Lochmüller; Ashwati Nair; Emily O'Heir; Alysia K Lovgren; Reza Maroofian; Henry Houlden; Kiran Polavarapu; Andreas Roos; Juliane S Müller; Denisa Hathazi; Patrick F Chinnery; Steven Laurie; Sergi Beltran; Hanns Lochmüller; Rita Horvath
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 15.255

  1 in total

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