Diagnosing Mitochondrial Disorders Remains Challenging in the Omics Era

Author:

Forny PatrickORCID,Footitt Emma,Davison James E.,Lam Amanda,Woodward Cathy E.,Batzios Spyros,Bhate Sanjay,Chakrapani Anupam,Cleary Maureen,Gissen PaulORCID,Grunewald Stephanie,Hurst Jane A.,Scott Richard,Heales Simon,Jacques Thomas S.,Cullup Thomas,Rahman ShamimaORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveWe hypothesized that novel investigative pathways are needed to decrease diagnostic odysseys in pediatric mitochondrial disease and sought to determine the utility of clinical exome sequencing in a large cohort with suspected mitochondrial disease and to explore whether any of the traditional indicators of mitochondrial disease predict a confirmed genetic diagnosis.MethodsWe investigated a cohort of 85 pediatric patients using clinical exome sequencing and compared the results with the outcome of traditional diagnostic tests, including biochemical testing of routine parameters (lactate, alanine, and proline), neuroimaging, and muscle biopsy with histology and respiratory chain enzyme activity studies.ResultsWe established a genetic diagnosis in 36.5% of the cohort and report 20 novel disease-causing variants (1 mitochondrial DNA). Counterintuitively, routine biochemical markers were more predictive of mitochondrial disease than more invasive and elaborate muscle studies.ConclusionsWe propose using biochemical markers to support the clinical suspicion of mitochondrial disease and then apply first-line clinical exome sequencing to identify a definite diagnosis. Muscle biopsy studies should only be used in clinically urgent situations or to confirm an inconclusive genetic result.Classification of EvidenceThis is a Class II diagnostic accuracy study showing that the combination of CSF and plasma biochemical tests plus neuroimaging could predict the presence or absence of exome sequencing confirmed mitochondrial disorders.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Clinical Neurology

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