ISSAID/EMQN Best Practice Guidelines for the Genetic Diagnosis of Monogenic Autoinflammatory Diseases in the Next-Generation Sequencing Era

Author:

Shinar Yael1,Ceccherini Isabella2,Rowczenio Dorota3,Aksentijevich Ivona4,Arostegui Juan56,Ben-Chétrit Eldad7,Boursier Guilaine8,Gattorno Marco9,Hayrapetyan Hasmik10,Ida Hiroaki11,Kanazawa Nobuo12,Lachmann Helen J3,Mensa-Vilaro Anna5,Nishikomori Ryuta13,Oberkanins Christian14,Obici Laura15,Ohara Osamu16,Ozen Seza17,Sarkisian Tamara10,Sheils Katie18,Wolstenholme Nicola18,Zonneveld-Huijssoon Evelien19,van Gijn Marielle E19,Touitou Isabelle820

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of FMF, Amyloidosis and Rare Autoinflammatory Diseases, Heller Institute, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel

2. UOC Medical Genetics, IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genova, Italy

3. National Amyloidosis Centre, UCL Medical School, London, UK

4. National Human Genome Research Institute, Bethesda, MD

5. Department of Immunology, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain

6. Institut d’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain

7. Rheumatology Unit, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel

8. Department of Medical Genetics, Rare Diseases and Personalized Medicine, Reference Center CEREMAIA, CHU Montpellier, University of Montpellier, Montpellier, France

9. Center for Autoinflammatory Diseases and Immunodeficiency, IRCCS Giannina Gaslini, Genova

10. Center of Medical Genetics and Primary Health Care, Yerevan, Armenia

11. Department of Medicine, Division of Respirology, Neurology and Rheumatology, Kurume University School of Medicine, Kurume, Japan

12. Department of Dermatology, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, Japan

13. Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Kurume University School of Medicine, Kurume, Japan

14. ViennaLab Diagnostics, Vienna, Austria

15. Amyloidosis Research and Treatment Centre, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy

16. Department of Applied Genomics, Kazusa DNA Research Institute, Kisarazu, Japan

17. Department of Pediatrics, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey

18. European Molecular Genetics Quality Network (EMQN), Manchester Centre for Genomic Medicine, St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester, UK

19. Department of Genetics, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

20. Stem Cells, Cellular Plasticity, Regenerative Medicine and Immunotherapies, INSERM, Montpellier, France

Abstract

Abstract Background Monogenic autoinflammatory diseases are caused by pathogenic variants in genes that regulate innate immune responses, and are characterized by sterile systemic inflammatory episodes. Since symptoms can overlap within this rapidly expanding disease category, accurate genetic diagnosis is of the utmost importance to initiate early inflammation-targeted treatment and prevent clinically significant or life-threatening complications. Initial recommendations for the genetic diagnosis of autoinflammatory diseases were limited to a gene-by-gene diagnosis strategy based on the Sanger method, and restricted to the 4 prototypic recurrent fevers (MEFV, MVK, TNFRSF1A, and NLRP3 genes). The development of best practices guidelines integrating critical recent discoveries has become essential. Methods The preparatory steps included 2 online surveys and pathogenicity annotation of newly recommended genes. The current guidelines were drafted by European Molecular Genetics Quality Network members, then discussed by a panel of experts of the International Society for Systemic Autoinflammatory Diseases during a consensus meeting. Results In these guidelines, we combine the diagnostic strength of next-generation sequencing and recommendations to 4 more recently identified genes (ADA2, NOD2, PSTPIP1, and TNFAIP3), nonclassical pathogenic genetic alterations, and atypical phenotypes. We present a referral-based decision tree for test scope and method (Sanger versus next-generation sequencing) and recommend on complementary explorations for mosaicism, copy-number variants, and gene dose. A genotype table based on the 5-category variant pathogenicity classification provides the clinical significance of prototypic genotypes per gene and disease. Conclusions These guidelines will orient and assist geneticists and health practitioners in providing up-to-date and appropriate diagnosis to their patients.

Funder

INSAID

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry, medical,Clinical Biochemistry

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