Exome sequencing in the pediatric neuromuscular clinic leads to more frequent diagnosis of both neuromuscular and neurodevelopmental conditions

Author:

Meyer Alayne P.12ORCID,Ma Jianing3,Brock Guy3,Hashimoto Sayaka4,Cottrell Catherine E.245,Mathew Mariam245,Hunter Jesse M.245,Leung Marco L.245ORCID,Corsmeier Don4,Jayaraman Vijayakumar4ORCID,Waldrop Megan A.267,Flanigan Kevin M.267ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Genetic and Genomic Medicine Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

2. Department of Pediatrics The Ohio State University College of Medicine Columbus Ohio USA

3. Department of Biomedical Informatics The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

4. The Steve and Cindy Rasmussen Institute for Genomic Medicine Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

5. Department of Pathology The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

6. Department of Neurology Nationwide Children's Hospital & The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

7. Center for Gene Therapy Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroduction/AimsExome sequencing (ES) has proven to be a valuable diagnostic tool for neuromuscular disorders, which often pose a diagnostic challenge. The aims of this study were to investigate the clinical outcomes associated with utilization of ES in the pediatric neuromuscular clinic and to determine if specific phenotypic features or abnormal neurodiagnostic tests were predictive of a diagnostic result.MethodsThis was a retrospective medical record review of 76 pediatric neuromuscular clinic patients who underwent ES. Based upon clinical assessment prior to ES, patients were divided into two groups: affected by neuromuscular (n = 53) or non‐neuromuscular (n = 23) syndromes.ResultsA diagnosis was made in 28/76 (36.8%), with 29 unique disorders identified. In the neuromuscular group, a neuromuscular condition was confirmed in 78% of those receiving a genetic diagnosis. Early age of symptom onset was associated with a significantly higher diagnostic yield. The most common reason neuromuscular diagnoses were not detected on prior testing was due to causative genes not being present on disease‐specific panels. Changes to medical care were made in 57% of individuals receiving a diagnosis on ES.DiscussionThese data further support ES as a powerful diagnostic tool in the pediatric neuromuscular clinic and highlight the advantages of ES over gene panels, including the ability to identify diagnoses regardless of etiology, identify genes newly associated with disease, and identify multiple confounding diagnoses. Rapid and accurate diagnosis by ES can not only end the patient's diagnostic odyssey, but often impacts patients' medical management and genetic counseling of families.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Physiology

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