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Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping

PURPOSE: The widespread consensus is that genotyping is essential for patients with inherited retinal disease (IRD). Given the numerous ongoing gene therapy clinical trials for IRDs, identifying the pathogenic mutation in these patients has potential important therapeutic implications. In this study...

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Autores principales: Gupta, Priya R., Kheir, Wajiha, Peng, Bo, Duan, Jie, Chiang, John P-W., Iannaccone, Alessandro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9514548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36284670
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author Gupta, Priya R.
Kheir, Wajiha
Peng, Bo
Duan, Jie
Chiang, John P-W.
Iannaccone, Alessandro
author_facet Gupta, Priya R.
Kheir, Wajiha
Peng, Bo
Duan, Jie
Chiang, John P-W.
Iannaccone, Alessandro
author_sort Gupta, Priya R.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The widespread consensus is that genotyping is essential for patients with inherited retinal disease (IRD). Given the numerous ongoing gene therapy clinical trials for IRDs, identifying the pathogenic mutation in these patients has potential important therapeutic implications. In this study, we demonstrate how we identified with a high degree of confidence numerous novel disease-causing mutations, deletions, and duplications in a large consecutive IRD case series by using a judicious combination of careful, in-depth clinical-functional phenotyping to guide and integrate our genotyping approach. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of data between November 2016 and March 2018 from the Duke Center for Retinal Degenerations and Ophthalmic Genetic Diseases IRD patient database, which encompassed 378 IRD cases that had not yet been previously genotyped. With the exception of some patients who presented with classical clinical-functional phenotypes that allowed for targeted gene testing, all other subjects systematically underwent next-generation sequencing-based broad, IRD-focused panel testing. Most cases were also tested for parental allele phase. Results were reviewed vis-à-vis the clinical-functional phenotypes for reconciliation and potential addition of supplemental testing such as deletion/duplication microarrays or copy number variant (CNV) analysis. Supplemental testing was driven by an IRD specialist-laboratory consensus, and decisions were clinically or genetically driven or both. RESULTS: By judiciously using this two-way approach and leveraging to its full potential the benefits of careful, in-depth clinical-functional phenotyping by an experienced IRD specialist, more than 80% of the cases in this series were successfully genotyped. We also identified with a high degree of confidence 52 novel disease-causing mutations, deletions, and duplications. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of meticulous, expert clinical-functional phenotyping studies with systematic next-generation sequencing panel-based genotyping and microarray deletion/duplication testing or CNV analysis as applicable in accordance with the above-mentioned consensus was extremely effective at the diagnostic end, reduced costs, and saved time. IRD specialist-laboratory two-way interactions and case discussions would augment the efficacy of this approach and improve the diagnostic yield in successfully solving and genotyping IRD cases.
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spelling pubmed-95145482022-10-24 Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping Gupta, Priya R. Kheir, Wajiha Peng, Bo Duan, Jie Chiang, John P-W. Iannaccone, Alessandro Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: The widespread consensus is that genotyping is essential for patients with inherited retinal disease (IRD). Given the numerous ongoing gene therapy clinical trials for IRDs, identifying the pathogenic mutation in these patients has potential important therapeutic implications. In this study, we demonstrate how we identified with a high degree of confidence numerous novel disease-causing mutations, deletions, and duplications in a large consecutive IRD case series by using a judicious combination of careful, in-depth clinical-functional phenotyping to guide and integrate our genotyping approach. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of data between November 2016 and March 2018 from the Duke Center for Retinal Degenerations and Ophthalmic Genetic Diseases IRD patient database, which encompassed 378 IRD cases that had not yet been previously genotyped. With the exception of some patients who presented with classical clinical-functional phenotypes that allowed for targeted gene testing, all other subjects systematically underwent next-generation sequencing-based broad, IRD-focused panel testing. Most cases were also tested for parental allele phase. Results were reviewed vis-à-vis the clinical-functional phenotypes for reconciliation and potential addition of supplemental testing such as deletion/duplication microarrays or copy number variant (CNV) analysis. Supplemental testing was driven by an IRD specialist-laboratory consensus, and decisions were clinically or genetically driven or both. RESULTS: By judiciously using this two-way approach and leveraging to its full potential the benefits of careful, in-depth clinical-functional phenotyping by an experienced IRD specialist, more than 80% of the cases in this series were successfully genotyped. We also identified with a high degree of confidence 52 novel disease-causing mutations, deletions, and duplications. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of meticulous, expert clinical-functional phenotyping studies with systematic next-generation sequencing panel-based genotyping and microarray deletion/duplication testing or CNV analysis as applicable in accordance with the above-mentioned consensus was extremely effective at the diagnostic end, reduced costs, and saved time. IRD specialist-laboratory two-way interactions and case discussions would augment the efficacy of this approach and improve the diagnostic yield in successfully solving and genotyping IRD cases. Molecular Vision 2022-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9514548/ /pubmed/36284670 Text en Copyright © 2022 Molecular Vision. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, used for non-commercial purposes, and is not altered or transformed.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gupta, Priya R.
Kheir, Wajiha
Peng, Bo
Duan, Jie
Chiang, John P-W.
Iannaccone, Alessandro
Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title_full Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title_fullStr Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title_full_unstemmed Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title_short Identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad NGS panel-based genotyping
title_sort identification of numerous novel disease-causing variants in patients with inherited retinal diseases, combining careful clinical-functional phenotyping with systematic, broad ngs panel-based genotyping
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9514548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36284670
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