scholarly journals The long tail and rare disease research: the impact of next-generation sequencing for rare Mendelian disorders

2015 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
TONY SHEN ◽  
ARIEL LEE ◽  
CAROL SHEN ◽  
C.JIMMY LIN

SummaryThere are an estimated 6000–8000 rare Mendelian diseases that collectively affect 30 million individuals in the United States. The low incidence and prevalence of these diseases present significant challenges to improving diagnostics and treatments. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have revolutionized research of rare diseases. This article will first comment on the effectiveness of NGS through the lens of long-tailed economics. We then provide an overview of recent developments and challenges of NGS-based research on rare diseases. As the quality of NGS studies improve and the cost of sequencing decreases, NGS will continue to make a significant impact on the study of rare diseases moving forward.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabine Hazan ◽  
Sheldon Jordan

Abstract Background: Reports have been surfacing surrounding CNS-associated symptoms in individuals affected by coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19). Tourette syndrome is a neuropsychiatric disorder with usual onset in childhood. Gut microbiota can affect central physiology and function via the microbiota-gut-brain axis. The authors of this case report describe Tourette’s-like symptoms in a patient resulting from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection disrupting gut microbiota. Case Presentation: This case involves a 16-year-old female that developed acute onset Tourette’s-like symptoms along with neuropsychiatric symptoms after exposure to and infection from SARS-CoV-2. The patient had negative nasopharyngeal (NP) real-time reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) tests for SARS-CoV-2 on five occasions from August of 2020 through June of 2021. The patient’s symptoms continued to worsen over the next six months until next-generation sequencing (NGS) revealed SARS-CoV-2 in her stool. Her treatment was adjusted as NGS revealed SARS-CoV-2 in her stool. Repair of the gastrointestinal microbiota, treatment with nutraceutical and pharmaceutical agents, as well as alterations in her surroundings resulted in dramatic improvement in the microbiome and a significant reduction of symptoms.Discussion: The use of (RT-PCR) testing to determine the presence or absence of SARS-CoV-2 may be inadequate and inaccurate for individuals that have been exposed to the virus. In addition, the impact of SARS-CoV-2 infection of the GI tract may cause significant havoc in the gut microbiota. Additional testing, eradication of infectious agents, as well as restoration of the gut microbiome are needed to effectively manage and treat this condition. The patient’s symptoms worsened over the next six months until next-generation sequencing (NGS) revealed SARS-CoV-2 in her stool and her treatment was adjusted. Treatment with nutraceuticals and alterations in her surroundings was followed by a more normal microbiome and a dramatic reduction in symptoms.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3266-3266
Author(s):  
Cécile Bally ◽  
Aline Renneville ◽  
Lionel Adès ◽  
Claude Preudhomme ◽  
Hugues de Thé ◽  
...  

Abstract Background TP53 mutations inactivating p53 protein, often associated with loss of the remaining TP53 allele through 17p deletion, are major prognostic factors in many hematological malignancies, including CLL, myeloma, AML and MDS. In AML and MDS, they are usually associated with complex karyotype (including del 17p) and very poor prognosis (Blood 1991, 78(7):1652-7 , Bejar, NEJM 2011), including after allogeneic SCT (Middeke JM, Blood 2014) but they are also seen in lower risk MDS with isolated del 5q, where they confer resistance to Lenalidomide (Jadersten, JCO 2011). The advent of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) techniques has improved the detection of such mutations, by allowing the identification of small mutated clones. Other detection methods may prove interesting, especially functional methods like FASAY ( Functional Assay of Separated Allele in Yeast) , an easy and sensitive method that detects TP53 mutations by assessing the p53 function as transcription factor (Flaman et al, PNAS 1995). We compared the detection of TP53 mutations in MDS and AML by FASAY and NGS approaches. Methods The 84 patients analyzed included 10 AML, 10 higher risk MDS, and 64 lower risk MDS with del 5q. RNA and DNA were extracted from marrow mononuclear cells. TP53 mutations were detected on RNA by FASAY where, after amplification of the TP53 mRNA, the PCR product is co transfected with an open gap repair plasmid leading, by homologous recombination, to p53 protein expression in the yeast. The yeast strain used is dependent on p53 functionality for growth and color and detection of more than 10% of small red yeast colonies defines a non-functional FASAY result. All non-functional FASAY were confirmed by the split versions of the test and TP53 defects were characterized by Sanger sequencing. The detection limit is around 10% in our hands (Manie E, Cancer Res 2009). In parallel, TP53 mutations were detected on DNA by NGS using the IRON II plate design and pyrosequencing on a GS Junior System (Roche). (Kohlmann, Leukemia 2011).FASAY (+Sanger sequencing) and NGS were performed in two different labs. Results By FASAY, 47 patients (56%) had a functional p53 and 37 cases (44%) a non-functional p53 and a mutation was confirmed by Sanger in all non functional cases. By NGS analysis, no TP53 mutation was found in 47 cases (56%) and a mutation was detected in 37 cases (44%). In the 37 mutated cases by NGS, the median proportion of mutated allele was 35% (range 3 to 99%), including a median of 72%, 35%, 25 % in AML, higher risk MDS and lower risk MDS with del 5q, respectively. The mutated clone size was lower than 10% in only 2 patients who both had lower risk MDS with del 5q (3 and 6%, respectively). A perfect correlation between FASAY and NGS was found in 80 (95.5%) cases. The 4 discordant cases included a mutation detected only by FASAY in 2 cases, and only by NGS in 2 cases. Undetected mutations by NGS were insertions of intronic sequences (intron 9) not explored by the technique used. These insertions resulted in non-functional protein well detected by FASAY which analyses the global cDNA sequence including splicing defects. Undetected mutations by FASAY were mutations in which the percentage of mutated alleles was less than 10% (3% and 6 % respectively). Finally, while the cost of NGS analysis for TP53 mutation is around 200 euros when performed alone (and around 2000 euros when combined to analysis of the 30 main other genes involved in MDS and AML), the cost of the FASAY technique is around 20 euros (prices including reagents only). Conclusion The FASAY technique is a cheap method, that in spite of a sensitivity of only 10%, was able to detect 98% of TP53 mutations detected by NGS. In fact those mutations appear to involve generally relatively large clones in MDS and AML. FASAY could also detect 2 atypical intronic mutations overlooked by NGS. Demonstrating in such difficult cases that the resulting p53 protein is non functional and therefore probably has pathophysiological significance, is an advantage of FASAY .The combination of the 2 methods, and especially the combination of DNA and RNA analysis, may be useful in such cases. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. vi14-vi15
Author(s):  
S. Coquerelle ◽  
M. Darlington ◽  
M. Michel ◽  
M. Durand ◽  
J. Gutton ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 636
Author(s):  
Chi-Ching Tsang ◽  
Jade L. L. Teng ◽  
Susanna K. P. Lau ◽  
Patrick C. Y. Woo

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have recently developed beyond the research realm and started to mature into clinical applications. Here, we review the current use of NGS for laboratory diagnosis of fungal infections. Since the first reported case in 2014, >300 cases of fungal infections diagnosed by NGS were described. Pneumocystis jirovecii is the predominant fungus reported, constituting ~25% of the fungi detected. In ~12.5% of the cases, more than one fungus was detected by NGS. For P. jirovecii infections diagnosed by NGS, all 91 patients suffered from pneumonia and only 1 was HIV-positive. This is very different from the general epidemiology of P. jirovecii infections, of which HIV infection is the most important risk factor. The epidemiology of Talaromyces marneffei infection diagnosed by NGS is also different from its general epidemiology, in that only 3/11 patients were HIV-positive. The major advantage of using NGS for laboratory diagnosis is that it can pick up all pathogens, particularly when initial microbiological investigations are unfruitful. When the cost of NGS is further reduced, expertise more widely available and other obstacles overcome, NGS would be a useful tool for laboratory diagnosis of fungal infections, particularly for difficult-to-grow fungi and cases with low fungal loads.


Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 2928
Author(s):  
Katia Nones ◽  
Ann-Marie Patch

Next generation sequencing (NGS) describes the technical revolution that enabled massively parallel sequencing of fragmented nucleic acids, thus making possible our current genomic understanding of cancers [...]


Gut ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aatur D Singhi ◽  
Marina N Nikiforova ◽  
Jennifer Chennat ◽  
Georgios I Papachristou ◽  
Asif Khalid ◽  
...  

ObjectiveDespite improvements in imaging, serum CA19-9 and pathological evaluation, differentiating between benign and malignant bile duct strictures remains a diagnostic conundrum. Recent developments in next-generation sequencing (NGS) have opened new opportunities for early detection and management of cancers but, to date, have not been rigorously applied to biliary specimens.DesignWe prospectively evaluated a 28-gene NGS panel (BiliSeq) using endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography-obtained biliary specimens from patients with bile duct strictures. The diagnostic performance of serum CA19-9, pathological evaluation and BiliSeq was assessed on 252 patients (57 trainings and 195 validations) with 346 biliary specimens.ResultsThe sensitivity and specificity of BiliSeq for malignant strictures was 73% and 100%, respectively. In comparison, an elevated serum CA19-9 and pathological evaluation had sensitivities of 76% and 48%, and specificities of 69% and 99%, respectively. The combination of BiliSeq and pathological evaluation increased the sensitivity to 83% and maintained a specificity of 99%. BiliSeq improved the sensitivity of pathological evaluation for malignancy from 35% to 77% for biliary brushings and from 52% to 83% for biliary biopsies. Among patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), BiliSeq had an 83% sensitivity as compared with pathological evaluation with an 8% sensitivity. Therapeutically relevant genomic alterations were identified in 20 (8%) patients. Two patients withERBB2-amplified cholangiocarcinoma received a trastuzumab-based regimen and had measurable clinicoradiographic response.ConclusionsThe combination of BiliSeq and pathological evaluation of biliary specimens increased the detection of malignant strictures, particularly in patients with PSC. Additionally, BiliSeq identified alterations that may stratify patients for specific anticancer therapies.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2341-2341
Author(s):  
Marlise R. Luskin ◽  
Campbell L. Stewart ◽  
Jennifer JD Morrissette ◽  
David Lieberman ◽  
David J. Margolis ◽  
...  

Abstract Background:Leukemia cutis (LC) occurs in 10-30% of AML cases and may be a marker of poor prognosis. However, outside of monocytic AML (FAB M4/M5), no clinical or genetic predictors of LC are known. Recently, a number of somatic molecular mutations have been described in AML. Using amplicon-based next-generation sequencing (NGS) of a panel of recurrent, hematologic malignancy-associated mutations, we sought to determine potential molecular markers associated with the development of LC. Methods: A cohort of non-M3 AML patients treated at the University of Pennsylvania was identified in which NGS had been performed on either leukemic blasts obtained during clinical care or from the institutional tissue bank.Average read depth for 33 hematologic malignancy-associated genes was approximately 3000X, minimal depth was 250x, and reporting frequency cutoff for variants was 5%. Mutations were reported as pathogenic or variants of uncertain significance (VUS, further sub-classified internally as likely disease associated, VUS, or likely benign) based on the University’s Center for Personalized Diagnostics (CPD) review of publically available data; only pathogenic or likely disease-associated mutations were included in this analysis. A database maintained by dermatopathology was reviewed to identify cases of leukemia cutis at any time during the disease course. Independent dermatopathology review was obtained for indeterminate cases. Association between presence of each of the 3 most common molecular mutations (FLT3-ITD, DNMT3A, and NPM1) and development of LC was assessed by logistic regression, with adjustment for FAB M4/M5, as appropriate. The association between presence of a molecular mutation in different functional classes (tumor suppressors, activated signaling, chromatin modifiers, transcription factors, splicing machinery) and the development of LC was also assessed. Results:279 adult patients with AML with known molecular genotype were identified. Molecular profile was determined from AML diagnosis in (243, 88%) with the remainder undergoing assessment after prior therapy (relapsed or refractory). 56% were male with median age of 60 years (range 18-87) and median WBC count at diagnosis of 22 K/uL (range 0.4 -388 K/uL; 17% ≥100K/uL). The majority of patients had intermediate cytogenetic risk (12% favorable, 59% intermediate, 23% unfavorable, 6% unknown) and 41% of patients had FAB M4/M5 AML (9% unknown). The three most common mutations were NPM1 (29%), DNMT3A (25%), and FLT3-ITD (23%). NPM1mutations were enriched in patients with FAB M4/M5 AML (41% vs 23%, p=0.003). Leukemia cutis was present in 26 (9%) of patients. NPM1 mutant status was present in 14 of 26 cases of leukemia cutis (OR 3.17, 95% CI 1.40-7.20, p=0.006). No association was detected for LC and the presence of mutant FLT3-ITD (OR 1.27, p=0.613), mutant DNMT3A (OR 1.7, p=0.224), or a mutation in any functional class of AML mutations (all p-values NS). The impact of NPM1 mutant status remained significant after adjustment for association with M4/M5 AML (OR 3.91, p=0.005). As the histologic subtype of AML might modify the association between NPM1 mutations and leukemia cutis, we next examined the impact of NPM1 mutant status on patients with FAB M4/M5 AML and non-M4/M5 AML. Among patients with M4/M5 AML, 10/12 (80%) patients with LC were NPM1 mutant compared to 32/91 (35%) without LC suggesting that the presence of mutated NPM1 was significantly associated with the development of LC (OR 9.22, p=0.006). Among patients with non-M4/M5 AML, 3/9 (33%) of patients with leukemia cutis were NPM1 mutant compared to 32/142 (22.5%) without LC indicating no association in the non-M4/M5 subgroup (OR 1.72, p=0.461). Interestingly, M4/M5 AML was not associated with LC in the NPM1 WT cohort (OR 0.65, p=0.6). Conclusion: Using NGS, we identify a novel association between NPM1 mutation status and the presence of leukemia cutis, particularly within monocytic AML. Confirmation of these observations in a larger dataset is planned. Our data suggest potential cellular effects of NPM1 mutation affecting homing of leukemic blasts to skin and support the World Health Organization’s provisional classification of NPM1-mutated AML as a distinct biologic entity. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise Aigrain

Since the publication of the first draft of the human genome 20 years ago, several novel sequencing technologies have emerged. Whilst some drive the cost of DNA sequencing down, others address the difficult parts of the genome which remained inaccessible so far. But the next-generation sequencing (NGS) landscape is a fast-changing environment and one can easily get lost between second- and third- generation sequencers, or the pros and cons of short- versus long-read technologies. In this beginner’s guide to NGS, we will review the main NGS technologies available in 2021. We will compare sample preparation protocols and sequencing methods, highlighting the requirements and advantages of each technology.


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