Purpose:We report the diagnostic yield of whole-exome sequencing (WES) in 3,040 consecutive cases at a single clinical laboratory.Methods: WES was performed for many different clinical indications and included the proband plus two or more family members in 76% of cases.
Results:The overall diagnostic yield of WES was 28.8%. The diagnostic yield was 23.6% in proband-only cases and 31.0% when three family members were analyzed. The highest yield was for patients who had disorders involving hearing (55%, N = 11), vision (47%, N = 60), the skeletal muscle system (40%, N = 43), the skeletal system (39%, N = 54), multiple congenital anomalies (36%, N = 729), skin (32%, N = 31), the central nervous system (31%, N = 1,082), and the cardiovascular system (28%, N = 54). Of 2,091 cases in which secondary findings were analyzed for 56
Advances in DNA sequencing have made large, diagnostic gene panels affordable and efficient. Broad adoption of such panels has begun to deliver on the promises of personalized medicine, but has also brought new challenges such as the presence of unexpected results, or results of uncertain clinical significance. Genetic analysis of inherited cardiac conditions is particularly challenging due to the extensive genetic heterogeneity underlying cardiac phenotypes, and the overlapping, variable, and incompletely penetrant nature of their clinical presentations. The design of effective diagnostic tests and the effective use of the results depend on a clear understanding of the relationship between each gene and each considered condition. To address these issues, we developed simple, systematic approaches to three fundamental challenges: (1) evaluating the strength of the evidence suggesting that a particular condition is caused by pathogenic variants in a particular gene, (2) evaluating whether unusual genotype/phenotype observations represent a plausible expansion of clinical phenotype associated with a gene, and (3) establishing a molecular diagnostic strategy to capture overlapping clinical presentations. These approaches focus on the systematic evaluation of the pathogenicity of variants identified in clinically affected individuals, and the natural history of disease in those individuals. Here, we applied these approaches to the evaluation of more than 100 genes reported to be associated with inherited cardiomyopathies and arrhythmias including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia or cardiomyopathy, long QT syndrome, short QT syndrome, Brugada, and catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, and to a set of related syndromes such as Noonan Syndrome and Fabry disease. These approaches provide a framework for delivering meaningful and accurate genetic test results to individuals with hereditary cardiac conditions.
Purpose of Review
RNA analysis is beginning to be integrated into clinical laboratory genomics, and a review of its current uses and limitations is warranted. Here, we summarize the scope and utility of RNA analysis in the context of clinical genetic testing, including considerations for genetic counseling.
Recent Findings
RNA analysis is a powerful approach for interpreting some variants of uncertain significance, for analyzing splicing alterations, for providing additional functional evidence for sequence and structural variants, and for discovering novel variants. However, a review of RNA sequencing methods has noted variability in both laboratory processes and findings. Genetic counseling related to RNA analysis has to take into account nonstandardized laboratory processes, sample-type limitations, and differences in variant-interpretation outcomes.
Summary
RNA analysis is an important complement to DNA testing, although limitations still exist. Maximizing the utility of RNA analysis will require appropriate patient referrals and standardization of laboratory processes as the practice continues to expand the ability to identify and resolve molecular diagnoses.
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