Clinical Whole-Exome Sequencing for the Diagnosis of Mendelian Disorders

Yaping Yang(Baylor College of Medicine), Donna M. Muzny(Baylor College of Medicine), Jeffrey G. Reid(Baylor College of Medicine), Matthew N. Bainbridge(Baylor College of Medicine), Alecia Willis(Baylor College of Medicine), Patricia A. Ward(Baylor College of Medicine), Alicia Braxton(Baylor College of Medicine), Joke Beuten(Baylor College of Medicine), Fan Xia(Baylor College of Medicine), Zhiyv Niu(Baylor College of Medicine), Matthew T. Hardison(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard Person(Baylor College of Medicine), Mir Reza Bekheirnia(Baylor College of Medicine), Magalie S. Leduc(Baylor College of Medicine), Amelia Kirby(Baylor College of Medicine), Peter Pham(Baylor College of Medicine), Jennifer Scull(Baylor College of Medicine), Min Wang(Baylor College of Medicine), Yan Ding(Baylor College of Medicine), Sharon E. Plon(Baylor College of Medicine), James R. Lupski(Baylor College of Medicine), Arthur L. Beaudet(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard A. Gibbs(Baylor College of Medicine), Christine M. Eng(Baylor College of Medicine)
New England Journal of Medicine
October 2, 2013
Cited by 1,969Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Whole-exome sequencing is a diagnostic approach for the identification of molecular defects in patients with suspected genetic disorders. METHODS: We developed technical, bioinformatic, interpretive, and validation pipelines for whole-exome sequencing in a certified clinical laboratory to identify sequence variants underlying disease phenotypes in patients. RESULTS: We present data on the first 250 probands for whom referring physicians ordered whole-exome sequencing. Patients presented with a range of phenotypes suggesting potential genetic causes. Approximately 80% were children with neurologic phenotypes. Insurance coverage was similar to that for established genetic tests. We identified 86 mutated alleles that were highly likely to be causative in 62 of the 250 patients, achieving a 25% molecular diagnostic rate (95% confidence interval, 20 to 31). Among the 62 patients, 33 had autosomal dominant disease, 16 had autosomal recessive disease, and 9 had X-linked disease. A total of 4 probands received two nonoverlapping molecular diagnoses, which potentially challenged the clinical diagnosis that had been made on the basis of history and physical examination. A total of 83% of the autosomal dominant mutant alleles and 40% of the X-linked mutant alleles occurred de novo. Recurrent clinical phenotypes occurred in patients with mutations that were highly likely to be causative in the same genes and in different genes responsible for genetically heterogeneous disorders. CONCLUSIONS: Whole-exome sequencing identified the underlying genetic defect in 25% of consecutive patients referred for evaluation of a possible genetic condition. (Funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute.).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis