Development of an evidence-based algorithm that optimizes sensitivity and specificity in ES-based diagnostics of a clinically heterogeneous patient population

被引:40
作者
Bauer, Peter [1 ]
Kandaswamy, Krishna Kumar [1 ]
Weiss, Maximilian E. R. [1 ]
Paknia, Omid [1 ]
Werber, Martin [1 ]
Bertoli-Avella, Aida M. [1 ]
Yueksel, Zafer [1 ]
Bochinska, Malgorzata [1 ]
Oprea, Gabriela E. [1 ]
Kishore, Shivendra [1 ]
Weckesser, Volkmar [1 ]
Karges, Ellen [1 ]
Rolfs, Arndt [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Centogene AG, Rostock, Germany
[2] Med Univ Rostock, Albrecht Kossel Inst Neuroregenerat, Rostock, Germany
关键词
Genetic testing; Laboratory standards; Sensitivity; Specificity; exome sequencing; GENERATION SEQUENCING PANEL; LABORATORY STANDARDS; WHOLE-EXOME; VALIDATION; VARIANTS; SAMPLES;
D O I
10.1038/s41436-018-0016-6
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Purpose: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) is rapidly replacing Sanger sequencing in genetic diagnostics. Sensitivity and specificity of NGS approaches are not well-defined, but can be estimated from applying NGS and Sanger sequencing in parallel. Utilizing this strategy, we aimed at optimizing exome sequencing (ES)-based diagnostics of a clinically diverse patient population. Methods: Consecutive DNA samples from unrelated patients with suspected genetic disease were exome-sequenced; comparatively nonstringent criteria were applied in variant calling. One thousand forty-eight variants in genes compatible with the clinical diagnosis were followed up by Sanger sequencing. Based on a set of variant-specific features, predictors for true positives and true negatives were developed. Results: Sanger sequencing confirmed 81.9% of ES-derived variants. Calls from the lower end of stringency accounted for the majority of the false positives, but also contained similar to 5% of the true positives. A predictor incorporating three variant-specific features classified 91.7% of variants with 100% specificity and 99.75% sensitivity. Confirmation status of the remaining variants (8.3%) was not predictable. Conclusions: Criteria for variant calling in ES-based diagnostics impact on specificity and sensitivity. Confirmatory sequencing for a proportion of variants, therefore, remains a necessity. Our study exemplifies how these variants can be defined on an empirical basis.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 61
页数:9
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   Sequence Capture and Next-Generation Resequencing of Multiple Tagged Nucleic Acid Samples for Mutation Screening of Urea Cycle Disorders [J].
Amstutz, Ursula ;
Andrey-Zuercher, Gisela ;
Suciu, Dominic ;
Jaggi, Rolf ;
Haeberle, Johannes ;
Largiader, Carlo R. .
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY, 2011, 57 (01) :102-111
[2]   College of American Pathologists' Laboratory Standards for Next-Generation Sequencing Clinical Tests [J].
Aziz, Nazneen ;
Zhao, Qin ;
Bry, Lynn ;
Driscoll, Denise K. ;
Funke, Birgit ;
Gibson, Jane S. ;
Grody, Wayne W. ;
Hegde, Madhuri R. ;
Hoeltge, Gerald A. ;
Leonard, Debra G. B. ;
Merker, Jason D. ;
Nagarajan, Rakesh ;
Palicki, Linda A. ;
Robetorye, Ryan S. ;
Schrijver, Iris ;
Weck, Karen E. ;
Voelkerding, Karl V. .
ARCHIVES OF PATHOLOGY & LABORATORY MEDICINE, 2015, 139 (04) :481-493
[3]   Confirming Variants in Next-Generation Sequencing Panel Testing by Sanger Sequencing [J].
Baudhuin, Linnea M. ;
Lagerstedt, Susan A. ;
Klee, Eric W. ;
Fadra, Numrah ;
Oglesbee, Devin ;
Ferber, Matthew J. .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS, 2015, 17 (04) :456-461
[4]   Systematic Evaluation of Sanger Validation of Next-Generation Sequencing Variants [J].
Beck, Tyler F. ;
Mullikin, James C. ;
Biesecker, Leslie G. .
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY, 2016, 62 (04) :647-654
[5]   Carrier Testing for Severe Childhood Recessive Diseases by Next-Generation Sequencing [J].
Bell, Callum J. ;
Dinwiddie, Darrell L. ;
Miller, Neil A. ;
Hateley, Shannon L. ;
Ganusova, Elena E. ;
Mudge, Joann ;
Langley, Ray J. ;
Zhang, Lu ;
Lee, Clarence C. ;
Schilkey, Faye D. ;
Sheth, Vrunda ;
Woodward, Jimmy E. ;
Peckham, Heather E. ;
Schroth, Gary P. ;
Kim, Ryan W. ;
Kingsmore, Stephen F. .
SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2011, 3 (65)
[6]   Next generation massively parallel sequencing of targeted exomes to identify genetic mutations in primary ciliary dyskinesia: Implications for application to clinical testing [J].
Berg, Jonathan S. ;
Evans, James P. ;
Leigh, Margaret W. ;
Omran, Heymut ;
Bizon, Chris ;
Mane, Ketan ;
Knowles, Michael R. ;
Weck, Karen E. ;
Zariwala, Maimoona A. .
GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2011, 13 (03) :218-229
[7]   Rare-disease genetics in the era of next-generation sequencing: discovery to translation [J].
Boycott, Kym M. ;
Vanstone, Megan R. ;
Bulman, Dennis E. ;
MacKenzie, Alex E. .
NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS, 2013, 14 (10) :681-691
[8]   Assessment of clinical analytical sensitivity and specificity of next-generation sequencing for detection of simple and complex mutations [J].
Chin, Ephrem L. H. ;
da Silva, Cristina ;
Hegde, Madhuri .
BMC GENETICS, 2013, 14
[9]   Assuring the quality of next-generation sequencing in clinical laboratory practice [J].
Gargis, Amy S. ;
Kalman, Lisa ;
Berry, Meredith W. ;
Bick, David P. ;
Dimmock, David P. ;
Hambuch, Tina ;
Lu, Fei ;
Lyon, Elaine ;
Voelkerding, Karl V. ;
Zehnbauer, Barbara A. ;
Agarwala, Richa ;
Bennett, Sarah F. ;
Chen, Bin ;
Chin, Ephrem L. H. ;
Compton, John G. ;
Das, Soma ;
Farkas, Daniel H. ;
Ferber, Matthew J. ;
Funke, Birgit H. ;
Furtado, Manohar R. ;
Ganova-Raeva, Lilia M. ;
Geigenmueller, Ute ;
Gunselman, Sandra J. ;
Hegde, Madhuri R. ;
Johnson, Philip L. F. ;
Kasarskis, Andrew ;
Kulkarni, Shashikant ;
Lenk, Thomas ;
Liu, C. S. Jonathan ;
Manion, Megan ;
Manolio, Teri A. ;
Mardis, Elaine R. ;
Merker, Jason D. ;
Rajeevan, Mangalathu S. ;
Reese, Martin G. ;
Rehm, Heidi L. ;
Simen, Birgitte B. ;
Yeakley, Joanne M. ;
Zook, Justin M. ;
Lubin, Ira M. .
NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2012, 30 (11) :1033-1036
[10]   Concordance between whole-exome sequencing and clinical Sanger sequencing: implications for patient care [J].
Hamilton, Alison ;
Tetreault, Martine ;
Dyment, David A. ;
Zou, Ruobing ;
Kernohan, Kristin ;
Geraghty, Michael T. ;
Hartley, Taila ;
Boycott, Kym M. .
MOLECULAR GENETICS & GENOMIC MEDICINE, 2016, 4 (05) :504-512