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Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis

As whole exome sequencing (WES) becomes more widely used in the clinical realm, a wealth of unanalyzed information will be routinely generated. Using WES read depth data to predict copy number variation (CNV) could extend the diagnostic utility of this previously underutilized data by providing clin...

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Autores principales: Marchuk, Daniel S., Crooks, Kristy, Strande, Natasha, Kaiser-Rogers, Kathleen, Milko, Laura V., Brandt, Alicia, Arreola, Alexandra, Tilley, Christian R., Bizon, Chris, Vora, Neeta L., Wilhelmsen, Kirk C., Evans, James P., Berg, Jonathan S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6296659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30557390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209185
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author Marchuk, Daniel S.
Crooks, Kristy
Strande, Natasha
Kaiser-Rogers, Kathleen
Milko, Laura V.
Brandt, Alicia
Arreola, Alexandra
Tilley, Christian R.
Bizon, Chris
Vora, Neeta L.
Wilhelmsen, Kirk C.
Evans, James P.
Berg, Jonathan S.
author_facet Marchuk, Daniel S.
Crooks, Kristy
Strande, Natasha
Kaiser-Rogers, Kathleen
Milko, Laura V.
Brandt, Alicia
Arreola, Alexandra
Tilley, Christian R.
Bizon, Chris
Vora, Neeta L.
Wilhelmsen, Kirk C.
Evans, James P.
Berg, Jonathan S.
author_sort Marchuk, Daniel S.
collection PubMed
description As whole exome sequencing (WES) becomes more widely used in the clinical realm, a wealth of unanalyzed information will be routinely generated. Using WES read depth data to predict copy number variation (CNV) could extend the diagnostic utility of this previously underutilized data by providing clinically important information such as previously unsuspected deletions or duplications. We evaluated ExomeDepth, a free R package, in addition to an aneuploidy prediction method, to detect CNVs in WES data. First, in a blinded pilot study, five out of five genomic alterations were correctly identified from clinical samples with previously defined chromosomal gains or losses, including submicroscopic deletions, duplications, and chromosomal trisomy. We then examined CNV calls among 53 patients participating in the NCGENES research study and undergoing WES, who had existing clinical chromosomal microarray (CMA) data that could be used for validation. For unique CNVs that overlap well with WES coverage regions, sensitivity was 89% for deletions and 65% for duplications. While specificity of the algorithm calls remains a concern, this is less of an issue at high threshold filtering levels. When applied to all 672 patients from the exome sequencing study, ExomeDepth identified eleven diagnostically relevant CNVs ranging in size from a two exon deletion to whole chromosome duplications, as well as numerous other CNVs with varying clinical significance. This opportunistic analysis of WES data yields an additional 1.6% of patients in this study with pathogenic or likely pathogenic CNVs that are clinically relevant to their phenotype as well as clinically relevant secondary findings. Finally, we demonstrate the potential value of copy number analysis in cases where a single heterozygous likely or known pathogenic single nucleotide alteration is identified in a gene associated with an autosomal recessive condition.
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spelling pubmed-62966592018-12-28 Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis Marchuk, Daniel S. Crooks, Kristy Strande, Natasha Kaiser-Rogers, Kathleen Milko, Laura V. Brandt, Alicia Arreola, Alexandra Tilley, Christian R. Bizon, Chris Vora, Neeta L. Wilhelmsen, Kirk C. Evans, James P. Berg, Jonathan S. PLoS One Research Article As whole exome sequencing (WES) becomes more widely used in the clinical realm, a wealth of unanalyzed information will be routinely generated. Using WES read depth data to predict copy number variation (CNV) could extend the diagnostic utility of this previously underutilized data by providing clinically important information such as previously unsuspected deletions or duplications. We evaluated ExomeDepth, a free R package, in addition to an aneuploidy prediction method, to detect CNVs in WES data. First, in a blinded pilot study, five out of five genomic alterations were correctly identified from clinical samples with previously defined chromosomal gains or losses, including submicroscopic deletions, duplications, and chromosomal trisomy. We then examined CNV calls among 53 patients participating in the NCGENES research study and undergoing WES, who had existing clinical chromosomal microarray (CMA) data that could be used for validation. For unique CNVs that overlap well with WES coverage regions, sensitivity was 89% for deletions and 65% for duplications. While specificity of the algorithm calls remains a concern, this is less of an issue at high threshold filtering levels. When applied to all 672 patients from the exome sequencing study, ExomeDepth identified eleven diagnostically relevant CNVs ranging in size from a two exon deletion to whole chromosome duplications, as well as numerous other CNVs with varying clinical significance. This opportunistic analysis of WES data yields an additional 1.6% of patients in this study with pathogenic or likely pathogenic CNVs that are clinically relevant to their phenotype as well as clinically relevant secondary findings. Finally, we demonstrate the potential value of copy number analysis in cases where a single heterozygous likely or known pathogenic single nucleotide alteration is identified in a gene associated with an autosomal recessive condition. Public Library of Science 2018-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6296659/ /pubmed/30557390 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209185 Text en © 2018 Marchuk et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Marchuk, Daniel S.
Crooks, Kristy
Strande, Natasha
Kaiser-Rogers, Kathleen
Milko, Laura V.
Brandt, Alicia
Arreola, Alexandra
Tilley, Christian R.
Bizon, Chris
Vora, Neeta L.
Wilhelmsen, Kirk C.
Evans, James P.
Berg, Jonathan S.
Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title_full Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title_fullStr Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title_full_unstemmed Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title_short Increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
title_sort increasing the diagnostic yield of exome sequencing by copy number variant analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6296659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30557390
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209185
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