This report describes the largest cohort of patients with LRBA deficiency and offers guidelines for physicians to identify LRBA deficiency, supporting appropriate clinical management.
Background
The UK 100,000 Genomes Project is in the process of investigating the role of genome sequencing of patients with undiagnosed rare disease following usual care, and the alignment of research with healthcare implementation in the UK’s national health service. (Other parts of this Project focus on patients with cancer and infection.)
Methods
We enrolled participants, collected clinical features with human phenotype ontology terms, undertook genome sequencing and applied automated variant prioritization based on virtual gene panels (PanelApp) and phenotypes (Exomiser), alongside identification of novel pathogenic variants through research analysis. We report results on a pilot study of 4660 participants from 2183 families with 161 disorders covering a broad spectrum of rare disease.
Results
Diagnostic yields varied by family structure and were highest in trios and larger pedigrees. Likely monogenic disorders had much higher diagnostic yields (35%) with intellectual disability, hearing and vision disorders, achieving yields between 40 and 55%. Those with more complex etiologies had an overall 25% yield. Combining research and automated approaches was critical to 14% of diagnoses in which we found etiologic non-coding, structural and mitochondrial genome variants and coding variants poorly covered by exome sequencing. Cohort-wide burden testing across 57,000 genomes enabled discovery of 3 new disease genes and 19 novel associations. Of the genetic diagnoses that we made, 24% had immediate ramifications for the clinical decision-making for the patient or their relatives.
Conclusion
Our pilot study of genome sequencing in a national health care system demonstrates diagnostic uplift across a range of rare diseases.
(Funded by National Institute for Health Research and others)
BackgroundImmunodysregulation polyendocrinopathy enteropathy x-linked(IPEX) syndromeis a monogenic autoimmune disease caused by FOXP3 mutations. Because it is a rare disease, the natural history and response to treatments, including allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and immunosuppression (IS), have not been thoroughly examined.ObjectiveThis analysis sought to evaluate disease onset, progression, and long-term outcome of the 2 main treatments in long-term IPEX survivors.MethodsClinical histories of 96 patients with a genetically proven IPEX syndrome were collected from 38 institutions worldwide and retrospectively analyzed. To investigate possible factors suitable to predict the outcome, an organ involvement (OI) scoring system was developed.ResultsWe confirm neonatal onset with enteropathy, type 1 diabetes, and eczema. In addition, we found less common manifestations in delayed onset patients or during disease evolution. There is no correlation between the site of mutation and the disease course or outcome, and the same genotype can present with variable phenotypes. HSCT patients (n = 58) had a median follow-up of 2.7 years (range, 1 week-15 years). Patients receiving chronic IS (n = 34) had a median follow-up of 4 years (range, 2 months-25 years). The overall survival after HSCT was 73.2% (95% CI, 59.4-83.0) and after IS was 65.1% (95% CI, 62.8-95.8). The pretreatment OI score was the only significant predictor of overall survival after transplant (P = .035) but not under IS.ConclusionsPatients receiving chronic IS were hampered by disease recurrence or complications, impacting long-term disease-free survival. When performed in patients with a low OI score, HSCT resulted in disease resolution with better quality of life, independent of age, donor source, or conditioning regimen.
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