Clinical utility of comprehensive gene panel testing for common and rare causes of skeletal dysplasia and other skeletal disorders: Results from the largest cohort to date

Author:

MacCarrick Gretchen1,Aradhya Swaroop2,Bailey Mitch3,Chu Dorna3,Hunt Abigail3,Izzo Emanuela3,Krakow Deborah4ORCID,Mackenzie William5,Poll Sarah2,Raggio Cathleen6,Shediac Renée3,White Klane K.7,McLaughlin Heather M.2,Seratti Guillermo3

Affiliation:

1. McKusick‐Nathans Department of Genetic Medicine Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Invitae Corporation San Francisco California USA

3. BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc Novato California USA

4. David Geffen School of Medicine University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

5. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Nemours Children's Hospital Wilmington Delaware USA

6. Department of Orthopedic Surgery Hospital for Special Surgery New York New York USA

7. Department of Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Children's Hospital Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractMolecular genetics enables more precise diagnoses of skeletal dysplasia and other skeletal disorders (SDs). We investigated the clinical utility of multigene panel testing for 5011 unrelated individuals with SD in the United States (December 2019–April 2022). Median (range) age was 8 (0–90) years, 70.5% had short stature and/or disproportionate growth, 27.4% had a positive molecular diagnosis (MDx), and 30 individuals received two MDx. Genes most commonly contributing to MDx were FGFR3 (16.9%), ALPL (13.0%), and COL1A1 (10.3%). Most of the 112 genes associated with ≥1 MDx were primarily involved in signal transduction (n = 35), metabolism (n = 23), or extracellular matrix organization (n = 17). There were implications associated with specific care/treatment options for 84.4% (1158/1372) of MDx‐positive individuals; >50% were linked to conditions with targeted therapy approved or in clinical development, including osteogenesis imperfecta, achondroplasia, hypophosphatasia, and mucopolysaccharidosis. Forty individuals with initially inconclusive results became MDx‐positive following family testing. Follow‐up mucopolysaccharidosis enzyme activity testing was positive in 14 individuals (10 of these were not MDx‐positive). Our findings showed that inclusion of metabolic genes associated with SD increased the clinical utility of a gene panel and confirmed that integrated use of comprehensive gene panel testing with orthogonal testing reduced the burden of inconclusive results.

Funder

BioMarin Pharmaceutical

Publisher

Wiley

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