Increased diagnostic yield from negative whole genome‐slice panels using automated reanalysis

Author:

Berger Seth I.12,Pitsava Georgia2,Cohen Andrea J.123,Délot Emmanuèle C.24,LoTempio Jonathan24,Andrew Erin Hallie12,Martin Gloria Mas5,Marmolejos Sofia2,Albert Jessica6,Meltzer Beatrix6,Fraser Jamie12,Regier Debra S.12,Kahn‐Kirby Amanda H.5,Smith Erica5ORCID,Knoblach Susan2,Ko Arthur2,Fusaro Vincent A.5,Vilain Eric247

Affiliation:

1. Children's National Rare Disease Institute Division of Genetics and Metabolism Washington DC USA

2. Center for Genetic Medicine Research Children's National Research Institute Washington DC USA

3. National Human Genome Research Institute National Institutes of Health Bethesda Maryland USA

4. Department of Genomics and Precision Medicine George Washington University Washington DC USA

5. Translational Research Invitae Corporation San Francisco California USA

6. Molecular Diagnostics Laboratories Children's National Hospital Washington DC USA

7. Institute for Clinical and Translational Science University of California Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractWe evaluated the diagnostic yield using genome‐slice panel reanalysis in the clinical setting using an automated phenotype/gene ranking system. We analyzed whole genome sequencing (WGS) data produced from clinically ordered panels built as bioinformatic slices for 16 clinically diverse, undiagnosed cases referred to the Pediatric Mendelian Genomics Research Center, an NHGRI‐funded GREGoR Consortium site. Genome‐wide reanalysis was performed using Moon™, a machine‐learning‐based tool for variant prioritization. In five out of 16 cases, we discovered a potentially clinically significant variant. In four of these cases, the variant was found in a gene not included in the original panel due to phenotypic expansion of a disorder or incomplete initial phenotyping of the patient. In the fifth case, the gene containing the variant was included in the original panel, but being a complex structural rearrangement with intronic breakpoints outside the clinically analyzed regions, it was not initially identified. Automated genome‐wide reanalysis of clinical WGS data generated during targeted panels testing yielded a 25% increase in diagnostic findings and a possibly clinically relevant finding in one additional case, underscoring the added value of analyses versus those routinely performed in the clinical setting.

Funder

National Human Genome Research Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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