Rapid Whole-Genome Sequencing for Genetic Disease Diagnosis in Neonatal Intensive Care Units

Carol Saunders(Children's Mercy Hospital), Neil Miller(Children's Mercy Hospital), Sarah Soden(Children's Mercy Hospital), Darrell L. Dinwiddie(Children's Mercy Hospital), Aaron Noll(Children's Mercy Hospital), Noor Abu Alnadi(University of Missouri–Kansas City), Nevene Andraws(Children's Mercy Hospital), Melanie Patterson(Children's Mercy Hospital), Lisa Ann Krivohlavek(Children's Mercy Hospital), Joel Fellis(University of Chester), Sean Humphray(University of Chester), Peter Saffrey(University of Chester), Zoya Kingsbury(University of Chester), Jacqueline Weir(University of Chester), Jason Betley(University of Chester), Russell Grocock(University of Chester), Elliott H. Margulies(University of Chester), Emily Farrow(Children's Mercy Hospital), Michael Artman(Children's Mercy Hospital), Nicole P. Safina(Children's Mercy Hospital), Joshua E. Petrikin(Children's Mercy Hospital), Kevin P. Hall(University of Chester), Stephen F. Kingsmore(Children's Mercy Hospital)
Science Translational Medicine
October 3, 2012
Cited by 677

Abstract

Monogenic diseases are frequent causes of neonatal morbidity and mortality, and disease presentations are often undifferentiated at birth. More than 3500 monogenic diseases have been characterized, but clinical testing is available for only some of them and many feature clinical and genetic heterogeneity. Hence, an immense unmet need exists for improved molecular diagnosis in infants. Because disease progression is extremely rapid, albeit heterogeneous, in newborns, molecular diagnoses must occur quickly to be relevant for clinical decision-making. We describe 50-hour differential diagnosis of genetic disorders by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) that features automated bioinformatic analysis and is intended to be a prototype for use in neonatal intensive care units. Retrospective 50-hour WGS identified known molecular diagnoses in two children. Prospective WGS disclosed potential molecular diagnosis of a severe GJB2-related skin disease in one neonate; BRAT1-related lethal neonatal rigidity and multifocal seizure syndrome in another infant; identified BCL9L as a novel, recessive visceral heterotaxy gene (HTX6) in a pedigree; and ruled out known candidate genes in one infant. Sequencing of parents or affected siblings expedited the identification of disease genes in prospective cases. Thus, rapid WGS can potentially broaden and foreshorten differential diagnosis, resulting in fewer empirical treatments and faster progression to genetic and prognostic counseling.


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