Literature DB >> 33912281

Cou Cou, flying fish and a whole exome please... lessons learned from genetic testing in Barbados.

Morris Hilary Scantlebury1, Karlene Tanechia Barrett1, Simeona Jacinto2, David Orlando Christopher Corbin2, Marina Kerr3, Aneal Khan1,3,4.   

Abstract

Millions of patients, with suspected complex neurogenetic disorders, living in resource limited regions around the world have no access to genetic testing despite the rapidly expanding availability and decreasing costs of genetic testing in first world nations. The barriers to increasing availability of genetic testing in resource limited nations are multifactorial but can be attributed, in large part, to a lack of awareness of the power of genetic testing to lead to a rapid, cost-effective, diagnosis that potentially will have profound clinical implications on treatment and patient outcomes. We report our experience with whole exome sequencing (WES) done for the first time in 5 patients of African descent with a suspected neurogenetic disorder living in a resource limited setting on the Eastern Caribbean island of Barbados. A diagnostic pathogenic mutation was found in 3 patients in the SCN1A, STXBP1 and SCN4A, who clinically were diagnosed with Dravet syndrome, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, paramytonia and seizures respectively. A variant of undetermined significance was found in a patient with global developmental delays, hypotonia, with abnormal eye movements. In one patient WES was non-diagnostic. This result highlights the high yield of WES in carefully selected patients with a neurologic disease and the need for increase access to genetic testing in resource limited settings globally. Copyright: Morris Hilary Scantlebury et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Caribbean; Neurogenetic disorders; epilepsy

Year:  2021        PMID: 33912281      PMCID: PMC8051213          DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.38.111.27969

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pan Afr Med J


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