Whole-exome analysis of 177 pediatric patients with undiagnosed diseases

Author:

Narita Kotaro,Muramatsu Hideki,Narumi Satoshi,Nakamura Yuji,Okuno Yusuke,Suzuki Kyogo,Hamada Motoharu,Yamaguchi Naoya,Suzuki Atsushi,Nishio Yosuke,Shiraki Anna,Yamamori Ayako,Tsumura Yusuke,Sawamura Fumi,Kawaguchi Masahiro,Wakamatsu Manabu,Kataoka Shinsuke,Kato Kohji,Asada Hideyuki,Kubota Tetsuo,Muramatsu Yukako,Kidokoro Hiroyuki,Natsume Jun,Mizuno Seiji,Nakata Tomohiko,Inagaki Hidehito,Ishihara Naoko,Yonekawa Takahiro,Okumura Akihisa,Ogi Tomoo,Kojima Seiji,Kaname Tadashi,Hasegawa Tomonobu,Saitoh Shinji,Takahashi Yoshiyuki

Abstract

AbstractRecently, whole-exome sequencing (WES) has been used for genetic diagnoses of patients who remain otherwise undiagnosed. WES was performed in 177 Japanese patients with undiagnosed conditions who were referred to the Tokai regional branch of the Initiative on Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases (IRUD) (TOKAI-IRUD). This study included only patients who had not previously received genome-wide testing. Review meetings with specialists in various medical fields were held to evaluate the genetic diagnosis in each case, which was based on the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. WES identified diagnostic single-nucleotide variants in 66 patients and copy number variants (CNVs) in 11 patients. Additionally, a patient was diagnosed with Angelman syndrome with a complex clinical phenotype upon detection of a paternally derived uniparental disomy (UPD) [upd(15)pat] wherein the patient carried a homozygous DUOX2 p.E520D variant in the UPD region. Functional analysis confirmed that this DUOX2 variant was a loss-of-function missense substitution and the primary cause of congenital hypothyroidism. A significantly higher proportion of genetic diagnoses was achieved compared to previous reports (44%, 78/177 vs. 24–35%, respectively), probably due to detailed discussions and the higher rate of CNV detection.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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