Clinical exome sequencing for fetuses with ultrasound abnormalities and a suspected Mendelian disorder

Elizabeth A. Normand(Baylor College of Medicine), Alicia Braxton(Baylor College of Medicine), Salma Nassef(Baylor College of Medicine), Patricia A. Ward(Baylor College of Medicine), Francesco Vetrini(Baylor Genetics), Weimin He(Baylor Genetics), Vipulkumar Patel(Baylor Genetics), Chunjing Qu(Baylor Genetics), Lauren Westerfield(Baylor College of Medicine), Samantha Stover(Baylor College of Medicine), Avinash V. Dharmadhikari(Baylor Genetics), Donna M. Muzny(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard A. Gibbs(Baylor College of Medicine), Hongzheng Dai(Baylor College of Medicine), Linyan Meng(Baylor College of Medicine), Xia Wang(Baylor College of Medicine), Rui Xiao(Baylor College of Medicine), Pengfei Liu(Baylor College of Medicine), Weimin Bi(Baylor College of Medicine), Fan Xia(Baylor College of Medicine), Magdalena Walkiewicz(Baylor College of Medicine), Ignatia B. Van den Veyver(Baylor College of Medicine), Christine M. Eng(Baylor College of Medicine), Yaping Yang(Baylor College of Medicine)
Genome Medicine
September 28, 2018
Cited by 162Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Exome sequencing is now being incorporated into clinical care for pediatric and adult populations, but its integration into prenatal diagnosis has been more limited. One reason for this is the paucity of information about the clinical utility of exome sequencing in the prenatal setting. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed indications, results, time to results (turnaround time, TAT), and impact of exome results for 146 consecutive "fetal exomes" performed in a clinical diagnostic laboratory between March 2012 and November 2017. We define a fetal exome as one performed on a sample obtained from a fetus or a product of conception with at least one structural anomaly detected by prenatal imaging or autopsy. Statistical comparisons were performed using Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: Prenatal exome yielded an overall molecular diagnostic rate of 32% (n = 46/146). Of the 46 molecular diagnoses, 50% were autosomal dominant disorders (n = 23/46), 41% were autosomal recessive disorders (n = 19/46), and 9% were X-linked disorders (n = 4/46). The molecular diagnostic rate was highest for fetuses with anomalies affecting multiple organ systems and for fetuses with craniofacial anomalies. Out of 146 cases, a prenatal trio exome option designed for ongoing pregnancies was performed on 62 fetal specimens, resulting in a diagnostic yield of 35% with an average TAT of 14 days for initial reporting (excluding tissue culture time). The molecular diagnoses led to refined recurrence risk estimates, altered medical management, and informed reproductive planning for families. CONCLUSION: Exome sequencing is a useful diagnostic tool when fetal structural anomalies suggest a genetic etiology, but other standard prenatal genetic tests did not provide a diagnosis.


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