Next generation sequencing using phenotype-based panels for genetic testing in inherited retinal diseases

被引:21
作者
Shah, Mital [1 ,2 ]
Shanks, Morag [3 ]
Packham, Emily [3 ]
Williams, Jonathan [3 ]
Haysmoore, Jesse [3 ]
MacLaren, Robert E. [1 ,2 ]
Nemeth, Andrea H. [4 ,5 ]
Clouston, Penny [3 ]
Downes, Susan M. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Oxford Univ Hosp NHS Fdn Trust, Oxford Eye Hosp, Oxford, England
[2] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Clin Neurosci, Nuffield Lab Ophthalmol, Oxford, England
[3] Churchill Hosp, Oxford Med Genet Labs, Oxford, England
[4] Oxford Univ Hosp NHS Fdn Trust, Oxford Ctr Genom Med, Oxford, England
[5] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Clin Neurosci, Oxford, England
关键词
Retinal dystrophy; next generation sequencing; copy number variants; genetic testing; phenotype; DEGENERATIONS; VARIANTS; THERAPY;
D O I
10.1080/13816810.2020.1778736
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Introduction Diagnostic next generation sequencing (NGS) services for patients with inherited retinal diseases (IRD) traditionally use gene panel based approaches, which have cost and resource implications. Phenotype-based gene panels use a targeted strategy with further testing protocols, if initial results are negative. We present the molecular findings of the Oxford phenotype-based NGS panels for genetic testing in IRD. Methods Results of 655 consecutive patients referred for phenotype-based panel testing over 54 months were analysed to assess diagnostic yield. Results Variants were identified in 450 patients (68.7%). The overall diagnostic yield from phenotype-based panels was 42.8%. The diagnostic yield was highest from panels representing distinct clinical phenotypes: Usher panel 90.9% and congenital stationary night blindness panel 75.0%. Retinitis pigmentosa/rod-cone dystrophy was the commonest presenting phenotype (n = 243) and Usher syndrome was the commonest presenting syndromic disease (n = 39). Patients presenting with late-onset (>= 50 years) macular disease had a lower diagnostic yield (18.0%) compared with patients <50 years (24.2%). Additionally, a diagnostic yield of 1.8% was attributable to copy number variants. Conclusions Phenotype-based genetic testing panels provide a targeted testing approach and reduce bioinformatics demand. The overall diagnostic yield achieved in this study reflects the wide range of phenotypes that were referred. This pragmatic approach provides a high yield for early-onset and clearly defined genetically determined disorders but clinical utility is not as clear for late-onset macular disorders. This phenotype-based panel approach is clinician-referrer orientated, and can be used as a front-end virtual panel, when whole genome sequencing is introduced into diagnostic services for IRD.
引用
收藏
页码:331 / 337
页数:7
相关论文
共 22 条
  • [1] Application of Whole Exome Sequencing in Six Families with an Initial Diagnosis of Autosomal Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa: Lessons Learned
    Almoguera, Berta
    Li, Jiankang
    Fernandez-San Jose, Patricia
    Liu, Yichuan
    March, Michael
    Pellegrino, Renata
    Golhar, Ryan
    Corton, Marta
    Blanco-Kelly, Fiona
    Isabel Lopez-Molina, Maria
    Garcia-Sandoval, Blanca
    Guo, Yiran
    Tian, Lifeng
    Liu, Xuanzhu
    Guan, Liping
    Zhang, Jianguo
    Keating, Brendan
    Xu, Xun
    Hakonarson, Hakon
    Ayuso, Carmen
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (07):
  • [2] Next-generation sequencing applied to a large French cone and cone-rod dystrophy cohort: mutation spectrum and new genotype-phenotype correlation
    Boulanger-Scemama, Elise
    El Shamieh, Said
    Demontant, Vanessa
    Condroyer, Christel
    Antonio, Aline
    Michiels, Christelle
    Boyard, Fiona
    Saraiva, Jean-Paul
    Letexier, Melanie
    Souied, Eric
    Mohand-Said, Saddek
    Sahel, Jose-Alain
    Zeitz, Christina
    Audo, Isabelle
    [J]. ORPHANET JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES, 2015, 10
  • [3] Copy-number variation is an important contributor to the genetic causality of inherited retinal degenerations
    Bujakowska, Kinga M.
    Fernandez-Godino, Rosario
    Place, Emily
    Consugar, Mark
    Navarro-Gomez, Daniel
    White, Joseph
    Bedoukian, Emma C.
    Zhu, Xiaosong
    Xie, Hongbo M.
    Gai, Xiaowu
    Leroy, Bart P.
    Pierce, Eric A.
    [J]. GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2017, 19 (06) : 643 - 651
  • [4] Increasing the Yield in Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing by Implicating CNV Analysis, Non-Coding Exons and the Overall Variant Load: The Example of Retinal Dystrophies
    Eisenberger, Tobias
    Neuhaus, Christine
    Khan, Arif O.
    Decker, Christian
    Preising, Markus N.
    Friedburg, Christoph
    Bieg, Anika
    Gliem, Martin
    Issa, Peter Charbel
    Holz, Frank G.
    Baig, Shahid M.
    Hellenbroich, Yorck
    Galvez, Alberto
    Platzer, Konrad
    Wollnik, Bernd
    Laddach, Nadja
    Ghaffari, Saeed Reza
    Rafati, Maryam
    Botzenhart, Elke
    Tinschert, Sigrid
    Boerger, Doris
    Bohring, Axel
    Schreml, Julia
    Koertge-Jung, Stefani
    Schell-Apacik, Chayim
    Bakur, Khadijah
    Al-Aama, Jumana Y.
    Neuhann, Teresa
    Herkenrath, Peter
    Nuernberg, Gudrun
    Nuernburg, Peter
    Davis, John S.
    Gal, Andreas
    Bergmann, Carsten
    Lorenz, Birgit
    Bolz, Hanno J.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (11):
  • [5] Ellard S., 2020, ASS CLIN GENET SCI, P1
  • [6] Molecular findings from 537 individuals with inherited retinal disease
    Ellingford, Jamie M.
    Barton, Stephanie
    Bhaskar, Sanjeev
    O'Sullivan, James
    Williams, Simon G.
    Lamb, Janine A.
    Panda, Binay
    Sergouniotis, Panagiotis I.
    Gillespie, Rachel L.
    Daiger, Stephen P.
    Hall, Georgina
    Gale, Theodora
    Lloyd, I. Christopher
    Bishop, Paul N.
    Ramsden, Simon C.
    Black, Graeme C. M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS, 2016, 53 (11) : 761 - 767
  • [7] Panel-based next generation sequencing as a reliable and efficient technique to detect mutations in unselected patients with retinal dystrophies
    Gloeckle, Nicola
    Kohl, Susanne
    Mohr, Julia
    Scheurenbrand, Tim
    Sprecher, Andrea
    Weisschuh, Nicole
    Bernd, Antje
    Rudolph, Guenther
    Schubach, Max
    Poloschek, Charlotte
    Zrenner, Eberhart
    Biskup, Saskia
    Berger, Wolfgang
    Wissinger, Bernd
    Neidhardt, John
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2014, 22 (01) : 99 - 104
  • [8] CLINICAL PROGRESS IN INHERITED RETINAL DEGENERATIONS: GENE THERAPY CLINICAL TRIALS AND ADVANCES IN GENETIC SEQUENCING
    Hafler, Brian P.
    [J]. RETINA-THE JOURNAL OF RETINAL AND VITREOUS DISEASES, 2017, 37 (03): : 417 - 423
  • [9] Advanced diagnostic genetic testing in inherited retinal disease: experience from a single tertiary referral centre in the UK National Health Service
    Khan, K. N.
    Chana, R.
    Ali, N.
    Wright, G.
    Webster, A. R.
    Moore, A. T.
    Michaelides, M.
    [J]. CLINICAL GENETICS, 2017, 91 (01) : 38 - 45
  • [10] Identification of genomic deletions causing inherited retinal degenerations by coverage analysis of whole exome sequencing data
    Khateb, Samer
    Hanany, Mor
    Khalaileh, Ayat
    Beryozkin, Avigail
    Meyer, Segev
    Abu-Diab, Alaa
    Abu Turky, Fathieh
    Mizrahi-Meissonnier, Liliana
    Lieberman, Sari
    Ben-Yosef, Tamar
    Banin, Eyal
    Sharon, Dror
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS, 2016, 53 (09) : 600 - 607