Cargando…

Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders

Background: Genetic conditions contribute a significant portion of disease etiologies in children admitted to general pediatric wards worldwide. While exome sequencing (ES) has improved clinical diagnosis and management over a variety of pediatric subspecialties, it is not yet routinely used by gene...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kagan, Maayan, Semo-Oz, Rotem, Ben Moshe, Yishay, Atias-Varon, Danit, Tirosh, Irit, Stern-Zimmer, Michal, Eliyahu, Aviva, Raas-Rothschild, Annick, Bivas, Maayan, Shlomovitz, Omer, Chorin, Odelia, Rock, Rachel, Tzadok, Michal, Ben-Zeev, Bruria, Heimer, Gali, Bolkier, Yoav, Gruber, Noah, Dagan, Adi, Bar Aluma, Bat El, Pessach, Itai M., Rechavi, Gideon, Barel, Ortal, Pode-Shakked, Ben, Anikster, Yair, Vivante, Asaf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9868164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36699461
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1018062
_version_ 1784876475000815616
author Kagan, Maayan
Semo-Oz, Rotem
Ben Moshe, Yishay
Atias-Varon, Danit
Tirosh, Irit
Stern-Zimmer, Michal
Eliyahu, Aviva
Raas-Rothschild, Annick
Bivas, Maayan
Shlomovitz, Omer
Chorin, Odelia
Rock, Rachel
Tzadok, Michal
Ben-Zeev, Bruria
Heimer, Gali
Bolkier, Yoav
Gruber, Noah
Dagan, Adi
Bar Aluma, Bat El
Pessach, Itai M.
Rechavi, Gideon
Barel, Ortal
Pode-Shakked, Ben
Anikster, Yair
Vivante, Asaf
author_facet Kagan, Maayan
Semo-Oz, Rotem
Ben Moshe, Yishay
Atias-Varon, Danit
Tirosh, Irit
Stern-Zimmer, Michal
Eliyahu, Aviva
Raas-Rothschild, Annick
Bivas, Maayan
Shlomovitz, Omer
Chorin, Odelia
Rock, Rachel
Tzadok, Michal
Ben-Zeev, Bruria
Heimer, Gali
Bolkier, Yoav
Gruber, Noah
Dagan, Adi
Bar Aluma, Bat El
Pessach, Itai M.
Rechavi, Gideon
Barel, Ortal
Pode-Shakked, Ben
Anikster, Yair
Vivante, Asaf
author_sort Kagan, Maayan
collection PubMed
description Background: Genetic conditions contribute a significant portion of disease etiologies in children admitted to general pediatric wards worldwide. While exome sequencing (ES) has improved clinical diagnosis and management over a variety of pediatric subspecialties, it is not yet routinely used by general pediatric hospitalists. We aim to investigate the impact of exome sequencing in sequencing-naive children suspected of having monogenic disorders while receiving inpatient care. Methods: We prospectively employed exome sequencing in children admitted to the general pediatric inpatient service at a large tertiary medical center in Israel. Genetic analysis was triggered by general and/or subspecialist pediatricians who were part of the primary inpatient team. We determined the diagnostic yield among children who were referred for exome sequencing and observed the effects of genetic diagnosis on medical care. Results: A total of fifty probands were evaluated and exome sequenced during the study period. The most common phenotypes included were neurodevelopmental (56%), gastrointestinal (34%), and congenital cardiac anomalies (24%). A molecular diagnosis was reached in 38% of patients. Among seven patients (37%), the molecular genetic diagnosis influenced subsequent clinical management already during admission or shortly following discharge. Conclusion: We identified a significant fraction of genetic etiologies among undiagnosed children admitted to the general pediatric ward. Our results support that early application of exome sequencing may be maximized by pediatric hospitalists’ high index of suspicion for an underlying genetic etiology, prompting an in-house genetic evaluation. This framework should include a multidisciplinary co-management approach of the primary care team working alongside with subspecialties, geneticists and bioinformaticians.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9868164
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98681642023-01-24 Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders Kagan, Maayan Semo-Oz, Rotem Ben Moshe, Yishay Atias-Varon, Danit Tirosh, Irit Stern-Zimmer, Michal Eliyahu, Aviva Raas-Rothschild, Annick Bivas, Maayan Shlomovitz, Omer Chorin, Odelia Rock, Rachel Tzadok, Michal Ben-Zeev, Bruria Heimer, Gali Bolkier, Yoav Gruber, Noah Dagan, Adi Bar Aluma, Bat El Pessach, Itai M. Rechavi, Gideon Barel, Ortal Pode-Shakked, Ben Anikster, Yair Vivante, Asaf Front Genet Genetics Background: Genetic conditions contribute a significant portion of disease etiologies in children admitted to general pediatric wards worldwide. While exome sequencing (ES) has improved clinical diagnosis and management over a variety of pediatric subspecialties, it is not yet routinely used by general pediatric hospitalists. We aim to investigate the impact of exome sequencing in sequencing-naive children suspected of having monogenic disorders while receiving inpatient care. Methods: We prospectively employed exome sequencing in children admitted to the general pediatric inpatient service at a large tertiary medical center in Israel. Genetic analysis was triggered by general and/or subspecialist pediatricians who were part of the primary inpatient team. We determined the diagnostic yield among children who were referred for exome sequencing and observed the effects of genetic diagnosis on medical care. Results: A total of fifty probands were evaluated and exome sequenced during the study period. The most common phenotypes included were neurodevelopmental (56%), gastrointestinal (34%), and congenital cardiac anomalies (24%). A molecular diagnosis was reached in 38% of patients. Among seven patients (37%), the molecular genetic diagnosis influenced subsequent clinical management already during admission or shortly following discharge. Conclusion: We identified a significant fraction of genetic etiologies among undiagnosed children admitted to the general pediatric ward. Our results support that early application of exome sequencing may be maximized by pediatric hospitalists’ high index of suspicion for an underlying genetic etiology, prompting an in-house genetic evaluation. This framework should include a multidisciplinary co-management approach of the primary care team working alongside with subspecialties, geneticists and bioinformaticians. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9868164/ /pubmed/36699461 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1018062 Text en Copyright © 2023 Kagan, Semo-Oz, Ben Moshe, Atias-Varon, Tirosh, Stern-Zimmer, Eliyahu, Raas-Rothschild, Bivas, Shlomovitz, Chorin, Rock, Tzadok, Ben-Zeev, Heimer, Bolkier, Gruber, Dagan, Bar Aluma, Pessach, Rechavi, Barel, Pode-Shakked, Anikster and Vivante. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Genetics
Kagan, Maayan
Semo-Oz, Rotem
Ben Moshe, Yishay
Atias-Varon, Danit
Tirosh, Irit
Stern-Zimmer, Michal
Eliyahu, Aviva
Raas-Rothschild, Annick
Bivas, Maayan
Shlomovitz, Omer
Chorin, Odelia
Rock, Rachel
Tzadok, Michal
Ben-Zeev, Bruria
Heimer, Gali
Bolkier, Yoav
Gruber, Noah
Dagan, Adi
Bar Aluma, Bat El
Pessach, Itai M.
Rechavi, Gideon
Barel, Ortal
Pode-Shakked, Ben
Anikster, Yair
Vivante, Asaf
Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title_full Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title_fullStr Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title_full_unstemmed Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title_short Clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
title_sort clinical impact of exome sequencing in the setting of a general pediatric ward for hospitalized children with suspected genetic disorders
topic Genetics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9868164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36699461
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1018062
work_keys_str_mv AT kaganmaayan clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT semoozrotem clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT benmosheyishay clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT atiasvarondanit clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT tiroshirit clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT sternzimmermichal clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT eliyahuaviva clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT raasrothschildannick clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT bivasmaayan clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT shlomovitzomer clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT chorinodelia clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT rockrachel clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT tzadokmichal clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT benzeevbruria clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT heimergali clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT bolkieryoav clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT grubernoah clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT daganadi clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT baralumabatel clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT pessachitaim clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT rechavigideon clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT barelortal clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT podeshakkedben clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT aniksteryair clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders
AT vivanteasaf clinicalimpactofexomesequencinginthesettingofageneralpediatricwardforhospitalizedchildrenwithsuspectedgeneticdisorders