scholarly journals Not Only Diagnostic Yield: Whole-Exome Sequencing in Infantile Cardiomyopathies Impacts on Clinical and Family Management

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 2
Author(s):  
Laura Pezzoli ◽  
Lidia Pezzani ◽  
Ezio Bonanomi ◽  
Chiara Marrone ◽  
Agnese Scatigno ◽  
...  

Whole-exome sequencing (WES) is a powerful and comprehensive tool for the genetic diagnosis of rare diseases, but few reports describe its timely application and clinical impact on infantile cardiomyopathies (CM). We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients with infantile CMs who had trio (proband and parents)-WES to determine whether results contributed to clinical management in urgent and non-urgent settings. Twenty-nine out of 42 enrolled patients (69.0%) received a definitive molecular diagnosis. The mean time-to-diagnosis was 9.7 days in urgent settings, and 17 out of 24 patients (70.8%) obtained an etiological classification. In non-urgent settings, the mean time-to-diagnosis was 225 days, and 12 out of 18 patients (66.7%) had a molecular diagnosis. In 37 out of 42 patients (88.1%), the genetic findings contributed to clinical management, including heart transplantation, palliative care, or medical treatment, independent of the patient’s critical condition. All 29 patients and families with a definitive diagnosis received specific counseling about recurrence risk, and in seven (24.1%) cases, the result facilitated diagnosis in parents or siblings. In conclusion, genetic diagnosis significantly contributes to patients’ clinical and family management, and trio-WES should be performed promptly to be an essential part of care in infantile cardiomyopathy, maximizing its clinical utility.

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 295-295
Author(s):  
Nancy K Gillis ◽  
Markus Ball ◽  
Qing Zhang ◽  
YuLong Zhao ◽  
Sean Yoder ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is an age-dependent genetic event occurring in as high as 10% of individuals over age 70. Although the clinical consequence of CHIP is not well understood, it is linked to an increased risk of primary hematologic malignancies and increased all-cause mortality. A recent study reported a higher prevalence (26%) of CHIP in patients with advanced cancers (Zehir A, ASCO abstract, 2016). However, the prevalence of CHIP in patients developing therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (T-MN) is unknown. We hypothesize that chemotherapy treated cancer patients with CHIP are at higher risk for T-MN development. To address this, we conducted a nested case-control study to compare the prevalence of CHIP in cancer patients who later developed T-MN compared to those that did not. We performed sequential targeted and whole exome sequencing of T-MN cases and described clonal evolution in cases for who paired CHIP and T-MN samples were available. Methods We identified all patients who consented to our institutional biobanking protocol with a primary cancer preceding T-MN and an age ≥ 70 years at the time of either cancer. Chart reviews were conducted to verify that only patients who received chemotherapy and provided a blood sample before development of T-MN were included. Controls were defined as cancer patients who did not develop a subsequent malignancy and were matched to cases 4:1 on gender, primary tumor diagnosis, age, smoking status (ever/never), chemotherapy drug class, and follow-up time. DNA was isolated from peripheral blood (CHIP) or bone marrow samples (T-MN), and targeted amplicon based next-generation sequencing was performed to identify somatic mutations in genes associated with CHIP (49 genes, ThunderBolts Myeloid Panel, RainDance). Mesenchymal stem cells and CD3+ cells derived from the T-MN sample were used as independent germline controls to confirm somatic CHIP mutations. Whole exome sequencing was also performed (Agilent SureSelect XT Clinical Research Exome, Illumina NextSeq Sequencer) in paired CHIP and T-MN samples and clonal architecture was inferred using SciClone (Miller CA, PLoS Comput Biol, 2014). CHIP was defined in any sample that harbored a somatic mutation at an allele frequency of >3%. Results After screening 105,998 consented individuals from 2006 to 2016, a total of 13 patients (Figure 1a) were identified. The most common primary cancer in patients who developed T-MN was lymphoma, followed by adenocarcinoma (Table 1). The mean time to development of T-MN was 6.1 years and the mean time from the sampling date to the diagnosis of T-MN was 1.8 years. There were no statistical differences in the chemotherapy received by cases and controls (Table 1). The T-MN diagnosis was AML in 6 and MDS in 7 patients, and the majority (10/13) of patients harbored complex cytogenetics. T-MN patients had a poor overall survival (median 11 mo, Figure 1b). The prevalence of CHIP in cases and controls was higher (33%) than reported in individuals without cancer (10%), implying overlapping risk variables. Patients with T-MN had a significantly higher prevalence of CHIP prior to T-MN diagnosis when compared to matched controls (61.5% vs. 26.8%, p=0.02). The most commonly mutated gene in CHIP patients with T-MN was TP53 (36.4% vs. 5.4% in non-T-MN patients, p=0.02), while CHIP patients who did not develop T-MN more commonly harbored mutations in TET2 (35%) (Fig 1c). There was no difference in the mean allele frequencies (MAF) of CHIP mutations in cases vs. controls (9.4% vs. 14.3%, p=0.27). There was also no trend in the number or MAF of CHIP mutations observed and time to T-MN. In the majority of cases (83.3%), CHIP MAF expanded at the time of T-MN, however, a subset of paired samples (16.7%) harbored CHIP mutations that retracted giving way to expansion of a distinct mutant clone (Fig 1d). Conclusions Chip often precedes development of T-MN in chemotherapy-treated cancer patients. The distribution of CHIP-related gene mutations differs between individuals with T-MN vs. those without suggesting that there may be mutation-specific differences in T-MN risk. Further, although most CHIP mutations represented the founding leukemic mutation based on allelic frequency, some CHIP mutations retracted at the time of T-MN. These studies support the use of CHIP to inform individualized T-MN risk across cancer. Disclosures Komrokji: Celgene: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Novartis: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau. Padron:Incyte: Research Funding; CTI: Research Funding; KALOBIOS: Research Funding.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Ka-Yee Kwong ◽  
Mandy Ho-Yin Tsang ◽  
Jasmine Lee-Fong Fung ◽  
Christopher Chun-Yu Mak ◽  
Kate Lok-San Chan ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Movement disorders are a group of heterogeneous neurological diseases including hyperkinetic disorders with unwanted excess movements and hypokinetic disorders with reduction in the degree of movements. The objective of our study is to investigate the genetic etiology of a cohort of paediatric patients with movement disorders by whole exome sequencing and to review the potential treatment implications after a genetic diagnosis. Results We studied a cohort of 31 patients who have paediatric-onset movement disorders with unrevealing etiologies. Whole exome sequencing was performed and rare variants were interrogated for pathogenicity. Genetic diagnoses have been confirmed in 10 patients with disease-causing variants in CTNNB1, SPAST, ATP1A3, PURA, SLC2A1, KMT2B, ACTB, GNAO1 and SPG11. 80% (8/10) of patients with genetic diagnosis have potential treatment implications and treatments have been offered to them. One patient with KMT2B dystonia showed clinical improvement with decrease in dystonia after receiving globus pallidus interna deep brain stimulation. Conclusions A diagnostic yield of 32% (10/31) was reported in our cohort and this allows a better prediction of prognosis and contributes to a more effective clinical management. The study highlights the potential of implementing precision medicine in the patients.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Somayeh Khatami ◽  
Masomeh Askari ◽  
Fatemeh Bahreini ◽  
Morteza Hashemzadeh-Chaleshtori ◽  
Saeed Hematian ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Clinical genetic diagnosis of non-syndromic hearing loss (NSHL) is quite challenging. With regard to its high heterogeneity as well as large size of some genes, it is also really difficult to detect causative mutations using traditional approaches. One of the recent technologies called whole-exome sequencing (WES) has been thus developed in this domain to remove the limitations of conventional methods. Methods This study was a report on a research study of two unrelated pedigrees with multiple affected cases of hearing loss (HL). Accordingly, clinical evaluations and genetic analysis were performed in both families. Results The results of WES data analysis to uncover autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss (ARNSHL) disease-causing variants was reported in the present study. Initial analysis identified two novel variants of MYO15A i.e. c.T6442A:p.W2148R and c.10504dupT:p.C3502Lfs*15 correspondingly which were later confirmed by Sanger validations and segregation analyses. According to online prediction tools, both identified variants seemed to have damaging effects. Conclusion In this study, whole exome sequencing were used as a first approach strategy to identify the two novel variants in MYO15A in two Iranian families with ARNSHL.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Maffucci ◽  
Charles A. Filion ◽  
Bertrand Boisson ◽  
Yuval Itan ◽  
Lei Shang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masoud Heidari ◽  
Hamid Gharshasbi ◽  
Alireza Isazadeh ◽  
Morteza Soleyman-Nejad ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Taskhiri ◽  
...  

Background:: Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is an autosomal recessive disorder resulting from mutations in the PKHD1 gene on chromosome 6 (6p12), a large gene spanning 470 kb of genomic DNA. Objective: The aim of the present study was to report newly identified mutations in the PKHD1 gene in two Iranian families with PKD. Materials and Methods: Genetic alterations of a 3-month-old boy and a 27-year-old girl with PKD were evaluated using whole-exome sequencing. The PCR direct sequencing was performed to analyse the co-segregation of the variants with the disease in the family. Finally, the molecular function of the identified novel mutations was evaluated by in silico study. Results: In the 3 month-old boy, a novel homozygous frameshift mutation was detected in the PKHD1 gene, which can cause PKD. Moreover, we identified three novel heterozygous missense mutations in ATIC, VPS13B, and TP53RK genes. In the 27-year-old woman, with two recurrent abortions history and two infant mortalities at early weeks due to metabolic and/or renal disease, we detected a novel missense mutation on PKHD1 gene and a novel mutation in ETFDH gene. Conclusion: In general, we have identified two novel mutations in the PKHD1 gene. These molecular findings can help accurately correlate genotype and phenotype in families with such disease in order to reduce patient births through preoperative genetic diagnosis or better management of disorders.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-116
Author(s):  
Kirill Zagorodnev ◽  
Aleksandr Romanko ◽  
Uliy Gorgul ◽  
Aleksandr Ivantsov ◽  
Anna Sokolenko ◽  
...  

The search for the new hereditary mutations and a precise molecular genetic diagnosis that determines the causative mutation in each specific case of hereditary breast cancer (BC) is a clinically important task since it helps to define the personal therapeutic approach and increase the effectiveness of preventive measures. Using whole-exome sequencing (WES) we analyzed the full spectrum of hereditary variations in 49 Russian patients with clinical signs of a hereditary disease which allowed us to compile a list of 229 candidate probably pathogenic germ-line variants. Then, the selected candidate mutations were validated by Sanger sequencing and molecular-epidemiological studies, the predisposing roles of three oncologically relevant mutations (USP39 c.*208G>C, SLIT3 p.Arg154Cys, and CREB3 p.Lys157Glu) were confirmed. Our candidate genes are first mentioned in connection with the hereditary risk of BC. The final proofs of the causative roles of these variants could be obtained through functional tests as well as via the analysis of the mutations segregation in BC families.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 3724
Author(s):  
Min-Jee Kim ◽  
Mi-Sun Yum ◽  
Go Hun Seo ◽  
Yena Lee ◽  
Han Na Jang ◽  
...  

Background: The aim of this study was to describe the application of whole exome sequencing (WES) in the accurate genetic diagnosis and personalized treatment of extremely rare neurogenetic disorders. Methods: From 2017 to 2019, children with neurodevelopmental symptoms were evaluated using WES in the pediatric neurology clinic and medical genetics center. The clinical presentation, laboratory findings including the genetic results from WES, and diagnosis-based treatment and outcomes of the four patients are discussed. Results: A total of 376 children with neurodevelopmental symptom were evaluated by WES, and four patients (1.1%) were diagnosed with treatable neurologic disorders. Patient 1 (Pt 1) showed global muscle hypotonia, dysmorphic facial features, and multiple anomalies beginning in the perinatal period. Pt 1 was diagnosed with congenital myasthenic syndrome 22 of PREPL deficiency. Pt 2 presented with hypotonia and developmental arrest and was diagnosed with autosomal recessive dopa-responsive dystonia due to TH deficiency. Pt 3, who suffered from intractable epilepsy and progressive cognitive decline, was diagnosed with epileptic encephalopathy 47 with a heterozygous FGF12 mutation. Pt 4 presented with motor delay and episodic ataxia and was diagnosed with episodic ataxia type II (heterozygous CACNA1A mutation). The patients’ major neurologic symptoms were remarkably relieved with pyridostigmine (Pt 1), levodopa (Pt 2), sodium channel blocker (Pt 3), and acetazolamide (Pt 4), and most patients regained developmental milestones in the follow-up period (0.4 to 3 years). Conclusions: The early application of WES helps in the identification of extremely rare genetic diseases, for which effective treatment modalities exist. Ultimately, WES resulted in optimal clinical outcomes of affected patients.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document