Diagnostic utility of next-generation sequence genetic panel testing in children presenting with a clinically significant fracture history

2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Harrington ◽  
Abdulmajeed AlSubaihin ◽  
Lucie Dupuis ◽  
Peter Kannu ◽  
Roberto Mendoza-Londono ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia Scocchia ◽  
Tiia Kangas-Kontio ◽  
Melita Irving ◽  
Matti Hero ◽  
Inka Saarinen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Skeletal dysplasia is typically diagnosed using a combination of radiographic imaging, clinical examinations, and molecular testing. Identifying a molecular diagnosis for an individual with a skeletal dysplasia can lead to improved clinical care, guide future medical management and treatment, and inform assessment of risk for familial recurrence. The molecular diagnostic utility of multi-gene panel testing using next-generation sequencing (NGS) has not yet been characterized for an unselected population of individuals with suspected skeletal dysplasia. In this study, we retrospectively reviewed patient reports to assess the diagnostic yield, reported variant characteristics, impact of copy number variation, and performance in prenatal diagnostics of panel tests for variants in genes associated with skeletal dysplasia and growth disorders. Results: Clinical reports of consecutive patients with a clinical indication of suspected skeletal dysplasia who underwent panel testing were examined. The 543 patients included in the study submitted samples for diagnostic genetic testing with an indication of suspected skeletal dysplasia or growth disorder and received one of three nested panel tests. A molecular diagnosis was established in 42.0% of patients (n=228/543). Diagnostic variants were identified in 71 genes, nearly half of which (n=35, 49.3%) contributed uniquely to a molecular diagnosis for a single patient in this cohort. Diagnostic yield was significantly higher among fetal samples (58.0%, n=51/88) than postnatal samples (38.9%, n=177/455; z=3.32, p<0.0009). Diagnostic variants in fetal cases were identified across 18 genes. Thirteen diagnostic CNVs were reported, representing 5.7% of diagnostic findings and ranging in size from 241-bp to whole chromosome aneuploidy. Additionally, 11.4% (36/315) of non-diagnostic patient reports had suspicious variants of unknown significance (VUS), in which additional family studies that provide segregation data and/or functional characterization may result in reclassification to likely pathogenic. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the utility of panel testing for individuals with a suspected skeletal dysplasia or growth disorder, with a particularly high diagnostic yield seen in prenatal cases. Pursuing comprehensive panel testing with high-resolution CNV analysis can provide a diagnostic benefit, given the considerable phenotype overlap amongst skeletal dysplasia conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia Scocchia ◽  
Tiia Kangas-Kontio ◽  
Melita Irving ◽  
Matti Hero ◽  
Inka Saarinen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Skeletal dysplasia is typically diagnosed using a combination of radiographic imaging, clinical examinations, and molecular testing. Identifying a molecular diagnosis for an individual with a skeletal dysplasia can lead to improved clinical care, guide future medical management and treatment, and inform assessment of risk for familial recurrence. The molecular diagnostic utility of multi-gene panel testing using next-generation sequencing (NGS) has not yet been characterized for an unselected population of individuals with suspected skeletal dysplasia. In this study, we retrospectively reviewed patient reports to assess the diagnostic yield, reported variant characteristics, impact of copy number variation, and performance in prenatal diagnostics of panel tests for variants in genes associated with skeletal dysplasia and growth disorders. Results Clinical reports of consecutive patients with a clinical indication of suspected skeletal dysplasia who underwent panel testing were examined. The 543 patients included in the study submitted samples for diagnostic genetic testing with an indication of suspected skeletal dysplasia or growth disorder and received one of three nested panel tests. A molecular diagnosis was established in 42.0% of patients (n = 228/543). Diagnostic variants were identified in 71 genes, nearly half of which (n = 35, 49.3%) contributed uniquely to a molecular diagnosis for a single patient in this cohort. Diagnostic yield was significantly higher among fetal samples (58.0%, n = 51/88) than postnatal samples (38.9%, n = 177/455; z = 3.32, p < 0.0009). Diagnostic variants in fetal cases were identified across 18 genes. Thirteen diagnostic CNVs were reported, representing 5.7% of diagnostic findings and ranging in size from 241-bp to whole chromosome aneuploidy. Additionally, 11.4% (36/315) of non-diagnostic patient reports had suspicious variants of unknown significance (VUS), in which additional family studies that provide segregation data and/or functional characterization may result in reclassification to likely pathogenic. Conclusions These findings demonstrate the utility of panel testing for individuals with a suspected skeletal dysplasia or growth disorder, with a particularly high diagnostic yield seen in prenatal cases. Pursuing comprehensive panel testing with high-resolution CNV analysis can provide a diagnostic benefit, given the considerable phenotype overlap amongst skeletal dysplasia conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. S221-S222
Author(s):  
Alicia Scocchia ◽  
Tiia Kangas-Kontio ◽  
Liisa Pelttari ◽  
Kim Gall ◽  
Inka Saarinen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 143 (2) ◽  
pp. AB110
Author(s):  
Nurcicek Padem ◽  
Alexander Ing ◽  
Kai Lee Yap ◽  
Asma Mustafa ◽  
Jessica Shank ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katie Fox Hanson ◽  
Paul Birinyi ◽  
Ronald Walker ◽  
Constantine Raptis ◽  
Rebecca Chernock ◽  
...  

Cutaneous spindle cell malignancy is associated with a broad differential diagnosis, particularly in the absence of a known primary melanocytic lesion. We present an unusually challenging patient who presented with clinical symptoms involving cranial nerves VII and VIII and a parotid-region mass, which was S100-positive while lacking in melanocytic pigment and markers. Over a year after resection of the parotid mass, both a cutaneous primary lentigo maligna melanoma and a metastatic CP angle melanoma were diagnosed in the same patient, prompting reconsideration of the diagnosis in the original parotid-region mass. Next-generation sequencing of a panel of cancer-associated genes demonstrated 19 identical, clinically significant mutations as well as a high tumor mutation burden in both the parotid-region and CP angle tumors, indicating a metastatic relationship between the two and a melanocytic identity of the parotid-region tumor.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 719-724
Author(s):  
Hassan Tariq ◽  
Asma Gul ◽  
Tahir Khadim ◽  
Hafeez Ud-Din ◽  
Hamid Tipu ◽  
...  

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