A Guideline for the Diagnosis of Pediatric Mitochondrial Disease: The Value of Muscle and Skin Biopsies in the Genetics Era

Author:

Mayr Johannes1,Nuoffer Jean2,Prokisch Holger34,Sperl Wolfgang1,Wortmann Saskia134

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, Salzburger Landeskliniken (SALK) and Paracelsus Medical University (PMU), Salzburg, Austria

2. University Institute of Clinical Chemistry, Bern University Hospital, Bern, Switzerland

3. Institute of Human Genetics, Technical University Munich, Munich, Germany

4. Institute of Human Genetics, Helmholtz Zentrum Munich, Neuherberg, Germany

Abstract

AbstractMitochondrial diseases are highly heterogeneous on the clinical, biochemical, and genetic level. In the traditional diagnostic approach (“biopsy first”) the evaluation of the affected individual and his body fluids, combined with the analysis of the respiratory chain enzymes in muscle based the subsequent Sanger sequencing of single candidate genes (“from function to gene”). Within the past few years, next-generation sequencing techniques of leucocyte-derived DNA (e.g., exome sequencing), with a diagnostic yield of more than 40%, have become the first line routine technology. This implicates that the invasive muscle biopsy is performed less often, especially in children. Furthermore, in this “genetics-first” approach the detection of new candidate genes precedes functional evaluations (“from gene to function”) leading to reverse phenotyping of affected individuals. Here, we line out the value of muscle and other tissue biopsies in this “genetics-first” era. We describe when and why it is still needed. We create awareness of pitfalls in the genetic diagnostics of mitochondrial diseases still necessitating tissue biopsies. Finally, we discuss why tissue biopsies are required for confirmatory diagnostics, or for getting a biochemical diagnosis in patients with hidden variants not detectable by standard genetics.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Clinical Neurology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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