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Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience

Exome sequencing (ES) has become an important tool in pediatric genomic medicine, improving identification of disease-associated variation due to assay breadth. Depth is also afforded by ES, enabling detection of lower-frequency mosaic variation compared to Sanger sequencing in the studied tissue, t...

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Autores principales: Miller, Cecelia R., Lee, Kristy, Pfau, Ruthann B., Reshmi, Shalini C., Corsmeier, Donald J., Hashimoto, Sayaka, Dave-Wala, Ashita, Jayaraman, Vijayakumar, Koboldt, Daniel, Matthews, Theodora, Mouhlas, Danielle, Stein, Maggie, McKinney, Aimee, Grossman, Tom, Kelly, Benjamin J., White, Peter, Magrini, Vincent, Wilson, Richard K., Mardis, Elaine R., Cottrell, Catherine E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7304353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32371413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/mcs.a005231
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author Miller, Cecelia R.
Lee, Kristy
Pfau, Ruthann B.
Reshmi, Shalini C.
Corsmeier, Donald J.
Hashimoto, Sayaka
Dave-Wala, Ashita
Jayaraman, Vijayakumar
Koboldt, Daniel
Matthews, Theodora
Mouhlas, Danielle
Stein, Maggie
McKinney, Aimee
Grossman, Tom
Kelly, Benjamin J.
White, Peter
Magrini, Vincent
Wilson, Richard K.
Mardis, Elaine R.
Cottrell, Catherine E.
author_facet Miller, Cecelia R.
Lee, Kristy
Pfau, Ruthann B.
Reshmi, Shalini C.
Corsmeier, Donald J.
Hashimoto, Sayaka
Dave-Wala, Ashita
Jayaraman, Vijayakumar
Koboldt, Daniel
Matthews, Theodora
Mouhlas, Danielle
Stein, Maggie
McKinney, Aimee
Grossman, Tom
Kelly, Benjamin J.
White, Peter
Magrini, Vincent
Wilson, Richard K.
Mardis, Elaine R.
Cottrell, Catherine E.
author_sort Miller, Cecelia R.
collection PubMed
description Exome sequencing (ES) has become an important tool in pediatric genomic medicine, improving identification of disease-associated variation due to assay breadth. Depth is also afforded by ES, enabling detection of lower-frequency mosaic variation compared to Sanger sequencing in the studied tissue, thus enhancing diagnostic yield. Within a pediatric tertiary-care hospital, we report two years of clinical ES data from probands evaluated for genetic disease to assess diagnostic yield, characteristics of causal variants, and prevalence of mosaicism among disease-causing variants. Exome-derived, phenotype-driven variant data from 357 probands was analyzed concurrent with parental ES data, when available. Blood was the source of nucleic acid. Sequence read alignments were manually reviewed for all assessed variants. Sanger sequencing was used for suspected de novo or mosaic variation. Clinical provider notes were reviewed to determine concordance between laboratory-reported data and the ordering provider's interpretation of variant-associated disease causality. Laboratory-derived diagnostic yield and provider-substantiated diagnoses had 91.4% concordance. The cohort returned 117 provider-substantiated diagnoses among 115 probands for a diagnostic yield of 32.2%. De novo variants represented 64.9% of disease-associated variation within trio analyses. Among the 115 probands, five harbored disease-associated somatic mosaic variation. Two additional probands were observed to inherit a disease-associated variant from an unaffected mosaic parent. Among inheritance patterns, de novo variation was the most frequent disease etiology. Somatic mosaicism is increasingly recognized as a significant contributor to genetic disease, particularly with increased sequence depth attainable from ES. This report highlights the potential and importance of detecting mosaicism in ES.
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spelling pubmed-73043532020-06-23 Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience Miller, Cecelia R. Lee, Kristy Pfau, Ruthann B. Reshmi, Shalini C. Corsmeier, Donald J. Hashimoto, Sayaka Dave-Wala, Ashita Jayaraman, Vijayakumar Koboldt, Daniel Matthews, Theodora Mouhlas, Danielle Stein, Maggie McKinney, Aimee Grossman, Tom Kelly, Benjamin J. White, Peter Magrini, Vincent Wilson, Richard K. Mardis, Elaine R. Cottrell, Catherine E. Cold Spring Harb Mol Case Stud Research Articles Exome sequencing (ES) has become an important tool in pediatric genomic medicine, improving identification of disease-associated variation due to assay breadth. Depth is also afforded by ES, enabling detection of lower-frequency mosaic variation compared to Sanger sequencing in the studied tissue, thus enhancing diagnostic yield. Within a pediatric tertiary-care hospital, we report two years of clinical ES data from probands evaluated for genetic disease to assess diagnostic yield, characteristics of causal variants, and prevalence of mosaicism among disease-causing variants. Exome-derived, phenotype-driven variant data from 357 probands was analyzed concurrent with parental ES data, when available. Blood was the source of nucleic acid. Sequence read alignments were manually reviewed for all assessed variants. Sanger sequencing was used for suspected de novo or mosaic variation. Clinical provider notes were reviewed to determine concordance between laboratory-reported data and the ordering provider's interpretation of variant-associated disease causality. Laboratory-derived diagnostic yield and provider-substantiated diagnoses had 91.4% concordance. The cohort returned 117 provider-substantiated diagnoses among 115 probands for a diagnostic yield of 32.2%. De novo variants represented 64.9% of disease-associated variation within trio analyses. Among the 115 probands, five harbored disease-associated somatic mosaic variation. Two additional probands were observed to inherit a disease-associated variant from an unaffected mosaic parent. Among inheritance patterns, de novo variation was the most frequent disease etiology. Somatic mosaicism is increasingly recognized as a significant contributor to genetic disease, particularly with increased sequence depth attainable from ES. This report highlights the potential and importance of detecting mosaicism in ES. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2020-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7304353/ /pubmed/32371413 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/mcs.a005231 Text en © 2020 Miller et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits reuse and redistribution, except for commercial purposes, provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Miller, Cecelia R.
Lee, Kristy
Pfau, Ruthann B.
Reshmi, Shalini C.
Corsmeier, Donald J.
Hashimoto, Sayaka
Dave-Wala, Ashita
Jayaraman, Vijayakumar
Koboldt, Daniel
Matthews, Theodora
Mouhlas, Danielle
Stein, Maggie
McKinney, Aimee
Grossman, Tom
Kelly, Benjamin J.
White, Peter
Magrini, Vincent
Wilson, Richard K.
Mardis, Elaine R.
Cottrell, Catherine E.
Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title_full Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title_fullStr Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title_full_unstemmed Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title_short Disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
title_sort disease-associated mosaic variation in clinical exome sequencing: a two-year pediatric tertiary care experience
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7304353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32371413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/mcs.a005231
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