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Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?

Clinical exome sequencing (CES) aids in the diagnosis of rare genetic disorders. Herein, we report the molecular diagnostic yield and spectrum of genetic alterations contributing to disease in 700 pediatric cases analyzed at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The overall diagnostic yield...

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Autores principales: Murrell, Jill R., Nesbitt, Addie May I., Baker, Samuel W., Pechter, Kieran B., Balciuniene, Jorune, Zhao, Xiaonan, Denenberg, Elizabeth H., DeChene, Elizabeth T., Wu, Chao, Jayaraman, Pushkala, Cao, Kajia, Gonzalez, Michael, Devoto, Marcella, Testori, Alessandro, Monos, John D., Dulik, Matthew C., Conlin, Laura K., Luo, Minjie, McDonald Gibson, Kristin, Guan, Qiaoning, Sarmady, Mahdi, Bhoj, Elizabeth, Helbig, Ingo, Zackai, Elaine H., Bedoukian, Emma C., Wilkens, Alisha, Tarpinian, Jennifer, Izumi, Kosuke, Skraban, Cara M., Deardorff, Matthew A., Medne, Livija, Krantz, Ian D., Krock, Bryan L., Santani, Avni B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Investigative Pathology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9904168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35065284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoldx.2021.12.002
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author Murrell, Jill R.
Nesbitt, Addie May I.
Baker, Samuel W.
Pechter, Kieran B.
Balciuniene, Jorune
Zhao, Xiaonan
Denenberg, Elizabeth H.
DeChene, Elizabeth T.
Wu, Chao
Jayaraman, Pushkala
Cao, Kajia
Gonzalez, Michael
Devoto, Marcella
Testori, Alessandro
Monos, John D.
Dulik, Matthew C.
Conlin, Laura K.
Luo, Minjie
McDonald Gibson, Kristin
Guan, Qiaoning
Sarmady, Mahdi
Bhoj, Elizabeth
Helbig, Ingo
Zackai, Elaine H.
Bedoukian, Emma C.
Wilkens, Alisha
Tarpinian, Jennifer
Izumi, Kosuke
Skraban, Cara M.
Deardorff, Matthew A.
Medne, Livija
Krantz, Ian D.
Krock, Bryan L.
Santani, Avni B.
author_facet Murrell, Jill R.
Nesbitt, Addie May I.
Baker, Samuel W.
Pechter, Kieran B.
Balciuniene, Jorune
Zhao, Xiaonan
Denenberg, Elizabeth H.
DeChene, Elizabeth T.
Wu, Chao
Jayaraman, Pushkala
Cao, Kajia
Gonzalez, Michael
Devoto, Marcella
Testori, Alessandro
Monos, John D.
Dulik, Matthew C.
Conlin, Laura K.
Luo, Minjie
McDonald Gibson, Kristin
Guan, Qiaoning
Sarmady, Mahdi
Bhoj, Elizabeth
Helbig, Ingo
Zackai, Elaine H.
Bedoukian, Emma C.
Wilkens, Alisha
Tarpinian, Jennifer
Izumi, Kosuke
Skraban, Cara M.
Deardorff, Matthew A.
Medne, Livija
Krantz, Ian D.
Krock, Bryan L.
Santani, Avni B.
author_sort Murrell, Jill R.
collection PubMed
description Clinical exome sequencing (CES) aids in the diagnosis of rare genetic disorders. Herein, we report the molecular diagnostic yield and spectrum of genetic alterations contributing to disease in 700 pediatric cases analyzed at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The overall diagnostic yield was 23%, with three cases having more than one molecular diagnosis and 2.6% having secondary/additional findings. A candidate gene finding was reported in another 8.4% of cases. The clinical indications with the highest diagnostic yield were neurodevelopmental disorders (including seizures), whereas immune- and oncology-related indications were negatively associated with molecular diagnosis. The rapid expansion of knowledge regarding the genome's role in human disease necessitates reanalysis of CES samples. To capture these new discoveries, a subset of cases (n = 240) underwent reanalysis, with an increase in diagnostic yield. We describe our experience reporting CES results in a pediatric setting, including reporting of secondary findings, reporting newly discovered genetic conditions, and revisiting negative test results. Finally, we highlight the challenges associated with implementing critical updates to the CES workflow. Although these updates are necessary, they demand an investment of time and resources from the laboratory. In summary, these data demonstrate the clinical utility of exome sequencing and reanalysis, while highlighting the critical considerations for continuous improvement of a CES test in a clinical laboratory.
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spelling pubmed-99041682023-02-15 Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing? Murrell, Jill R. Nesbitt, Addie May I. Baker, Samuel W. Pechter, Kieran B. Balciuniene, Jorune Zhao, Xiaonan Denenberg, Elizabeth H. DeChene, Elizabeth T. Wu, Chao Jayaraman, Pushkala Cao, Kajia Gonzalez, Michael Devoto, Marcella Testori, Alessandro Monos, John D. Dulik, Matthew C. Conlin, Laura K. Luo, Minjie McDonald Gibson, Kristin Guan, Qiaoning Sarmady, Mahdi Bhoj, Elizabeth Helbig, Ingo Zackai, Elaine H. Bedoukian, Emma C. Wilkens, Alisha Tarpinian, Jennifer Izumi, Kosuke Skraban, Cara M. Deardorff, Matthew A. Medne, Livija Krantz, Ian D. Krock, Bryan L. Santani, Avni B. J Mol Diagn Regular Article Clinical exome sequencing (CES) aids in the diagnosis of rare genetic disorders. Herein, we report the molecular diagnostic yield and spectrum of genetic alterations contributing to disease in 700 pediatric cases analyzed at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The overall diagnostic yield was 23%, with three cases having more than one molecular diagnosis and 2.6% having secondary/additional findings. A candidate gene finding was reported in another 8.4% of cases. The clinical indications with the highest diagnostic yield were neurodevelopmental disorders (including seizures), whereas immune- and oncology-related indications were negatively associated with molecular diagnosis. The rapid expansion of knowledge regarding the genome's role in human disease necessitates reanalysis of CES samples. To capture these new discoveries, a subset of cases (n = 240) underwent reanalysis, with an increase in diagnostic yield. We describe our experience reporting CES results in a pediatric setting, including reporting of secondary findings, reporting newly discovered genetic conditions, and revisiting negative test results. Finally, we highlight the challenges associated with implementing critical updates to the CES workflow. Although these updates are necessary, they demand an investment of time and resources from the laboratory. In summary, these data demonstrate the clinical utility of exome sequencing and reanalysis, while highlighting the critical considerations for continuous improvement of a CES test in a clinical laboratory. American Society for Investigative Pathology 2022-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9904168/ /pubmed/35065284 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoldx.2021.12.002 Text en © 2022 Association for Molecular Pathology and American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Murrell, Jill R.
Nesbitt, Addie May I.
Baker, Samuel W.
Pechter, Kieran B.
Balciuniene, Jorune
Zhao, Xiaonan
Denenberg, Elizabeth H.
DeChene, Elizabeth T.
Wu, Chao
Jayaraman, Pushkala
Cao, Kajia
Gonzalez, Michael
Devoto, Marcella
Testori, Alessandro
Monos, John D.
Dulik, Matthew C.
Conlin, Laura K.
Luo, Minjie
McDonald Gibson, Kristin
Guan, Qiaoning
Sarmady, Mahdi
Bhoj, Elizabeth
Helbig, Ingo
Zackai, Elaine H.
Bedoukian, Emma C.
Wilkens, Alisha
Tarpinian, Jennifer
Izumi, Kosuke
Skraban, Cara M.
Deardorff, Matthew A.
Medne, Livija
Krantz, Ian D.
Krock, Bryan L.
Santani, Avni B.
Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title_full Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title_fullStr Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title_short Molecular Diagnostic Outcomes from 700 Cases: What Can We Learn from a Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Exome Sequencing?
title_sort molecular diagnostic outcomes from 700 cases: what can we learn from a retrospective analysis of clinical exome sequencing?
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9904168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35065284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoldx.2021.12.002
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