Genome sequencing as a generic diagnostic strategy for rare disease

Author:

Schobers GabyORCID,Derks Ronny,den Ouden Amber,Swinkels Hilde,van Reeuwijk Jeroen,Bosgoed Ermanno,Lugtenberg Dorien,Sun Su Ming,Corominas Galbany Jordi,Weiss Marjan,Blok Marinus J.,Olde Keizer Richelle A. C. M.,Hofste Tom,Hellebrekers Debby,de Leeuw Nicole,Stegmann Alexander,Kamsteeg Erik-Jan,Paulussen Aimee D. C.,Ligtenberg Marjolijn J. L.,Bradley Xiangqun Zheng,Peden John,Gutierrez Alejandra,Pullen Adam,Payne Tom,Gilissen Christian,van den Wijngaard Arthur,Brunner Han G.,Nelen Marcel,Yntema Helger G.,Vissers Lisenka E. L. M.

Abstract

Abstract Background To diagnose the full spectrum of hereditary and congenital diseases, genetic laboratories use many different workflows, ranging from karyotyping to exome sequencing. A single generic high-throughput workflow would greatly increase efficiency. We assessed whether genome sequencing (GS) can replace these existing workflows aimed at germline genetic diagnosis for rare disease. Methods We performed short-read GS (NovaSeq™6000; 150 bp paired-end reads, 37 × mean coverage) on 1000 cases with 1271 known clinically relevant variants, identified across different workflows, representative of our tertiary diagnostic centers. Variants were categorized into small variants (single nucleotide variants and indels < 50 bp), large variants (copy number variants and short tandem repeats) and other variants (structural variants and aneuploidies). Variant calling format files were queried per variant, from which workflow-specific true positive rates (TPRs) for detection were determined. A TPR of ≥ 98% was considered the threshold for transition to GS. A GS-first scenario was generated for our laboratory, using diagnostic efficacy and predicted false negative as primary outcome measures. As input, we modeled the diagnostic path for all 24,570 individuals referred in 2022, combining the clinical referral, the transition of the underlying workflow(s) to GS, and the variant type(s) to be detected. Results Overall, 95% (1206/1271) of variants were detected. Detection rates differed per variant category: small variants in 96% (826/860), large variants in 93% (341/366), and other variants in 87% (39/45). TPRs varied between workflows (79–100%), with 7/10 being replaceable by GS. Models for our laboratory indicate that a GS-first strategy would be feasible for 84.9% of clinical referrals (750/883), translating to 71% of all individuals (17,444/24,570) receiving GS as their primary test. An estimated false negative rate of 0.3% could be expected. Conclusions GS can capture clinically relevant germline variants in a ‘GS-first strategy’ for the majority of clinical indications in a genetics diagnostic lab.

Funder

Dutch Organisation for Health Research and Development

H2020 research and innovation program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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