Linkage of whole genome sequencing and administrative health data in autism: A proof of concept study

Author:

Baribeau Danielle A.123ORCID,Arneja Jasleen4ORCID,Wang Xuesong5,Howe Jennifer6,McLaughlin John R.7,Tu Karen89,Guan Jun5,Iaboni Alana1,Kelley Elizabeth10ORCID,Ayub Muhammad911,Nicolson Robert12,Georgiades Stelios13,Scherer Stephen W.614,Bronskill Susan E.571516,Anagnostou Evdokia1,Brooks Jennifer D.7

Affiliation:

1. Bloorview Research Institute Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Department of Psychiatry University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. SickKids Research Institute The Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario Canada

4. Department of Epidemiology Biostatistics and Occupational Health McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

5. ICES Toronto Ontario Canada

6. The Centre for Applied Genomics, Department of Genetics and Genome Biology The Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario Canada

7. Dalla Lana School of Public Health University of Toronto Ontario Canada

8. North York General Hospital and Toronto Western Family Health Team University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

9. Department of Family and Community Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

10. Department of Psychiatry Queens University Kingston Ontario Canada

11. University College London London UK

12. Department of Psychiatry Western University London Ontario Canada

13. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

14. Department of Molecular Genetics and McLaughlin Centre University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

15. Women's College Research Institute Toronto Ontario Canada

16. Hurvitz Brain Sciences Program & Evaluative Clinical Sciences Sunnybrook Research Institute Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractWhether genetic testing in autism can help understand longitudinal health outcomes and health service needs is unclear. The objective of this study was to determine whether carrying an autism‐associated rare genetic variant is associated with differences in health system utilization by autistic children and youth. This retrospective cohort study examined 415 autistic children/youth who underwent genome sequencing and data collection through a translational neuroscience program (Province of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Disorders Network). Participant data were linked to provincial health administrative databases to identify historical health service utilization, health care costs, and complex chronic medical conditions during a 3‐year period. Health administrative data were compared between participants with and without a rare genetic variant in at least 1 of 74 genes associated with autism. Participants with a rare variant impacting an autism‐associated gene (n = 83, 20%) were less likely to have received psychiatric care (at least one psychiatrist visit: 19.3% vs. 34.3%, p = 0.01; outpatient mental health visit: 66% vs. 77%, p = 0.04). Health care costs were similar between groups (median: $5589 vs. $4938, p = 0.4) and genetic status was not associated with odds of being a high‐cost participant (top 20%) in this cohort. There were no differences in the proportion with complex chronic medical conditions between those with and without an autism‐associated genetic variant. Our study highlights the feasibility and potential value of genomic and health system data linkage to understand health service needs, disparities, and health trajectories in individuals with neurodevelopmental conditions.

Funder

Autism Speaks

Ontario Brain Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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