scholarly journals Comprehensive screening shows that mutations in the known syndromic genes are rare in individuals presenting with hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas W Laver ◽  
Matthew N Wakeling ◽  
Janet Hong Yeow Hua ◽  
Jayne AL Houghton ◽  
Khalid Hussain ◽  
...  

AbstractObjectiveHyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia (HH) can occur in isolation or more rarely feature as part of a syndrome. Screening for mutations in the ‘syndromic HH’ genes is guided by phenotype with genetic testing used to confirm the clinical diagnosis. As HH can be the presenting feature of a syndrome it is possible that mutations will be missed as these genes are not routinely screened in all newly diagnosed individuals. We investigated the frequency of pathogenic variants in syndromic genes in individuals with HH who had not been clinically diagnosed with a syndromic disorder at referral for genetic testing.DesignWe used genome sequencing data to assess the prevalence of mutations in syndromic HH genes in an international cohort of patients with HH of unknown genetic cause.MethodsWe undertook genome sequencing in 82 individuals with HH without a clinical diagnosis of a known syndrome at referral for genetic testing. Within this cohort we searched for the genetic aetiologies causing 20 different syndromes where HH had been reported as a feature.ResultsWe identified a pathogenic KMT2D variant in a patient with HH diagnosed at birth, confirming a genetic diagnosis of Kabuki syndrome. Clinical data received following the identification of the mutation highlighted additional features consistent with the genetic diagnosis. Pathogenic variants were not identified in the remainder of the cohort.ConclusionsPathogenic variants in the syndromic HH genes are rare but should be considered in newly diagnosed individuals as HH may be the presenting feature.

Author(s):  
M Adela Mansilla ◽  
Ramakrishna R Sompallae ◽  
Carla J Nishimura ◽  
Anne E Kwitek ◽  
Mycah J Kimble ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The clinical diagnosis of genetic renal diseases may be limited by the overlapping spectrum of manifestations between diseases or by the advancement of disease where clues to the original process are absent. The objective of this study was to determine whether genetic testing informs diagnosis and facilitates management of kidney disease patients. Methods We developed a comprehensive genetic testing panel (KidneySeq) to evaluate patients with various phenotypes including cystic diseases, congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT), tubulointerstitial diseases, transport disorders and glomerular diseases. We evaluated this panel in 127 consecutive patients ranging in age from newborns to 81 years who had samples sent in for genetic testing. Results The performance of the sequencing pipeline for single-nucleotide variants was validated using CEPH (Centre de’Etude du Polymorphism) controls and for indels using Genome-in-a-Bottle. To test the reliability of the copy number variant (CNV) analysis, positive samples were re-sequenced and analyzed. For patient samples, a multidisciplinary review board interpreted genetic results in the context of clinical data. A genetic diagnosis was made in 54 (43%) patients and ranged from 54% for CAKUT, 53% for ciliopathies/tubulointerstitial diseases, 45% for transport disorders to 33% for glomerulopathies. Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants included 46% missense, 11% nonsense, 6% splice site variants, 23% insertion–deletions and 14% CNVs. In 13 cases, the genetic result changed the clinical diagnosis. Conclusion Broad genetic testing should be considered in the evaluation of renal patients as it complements other tests and provides insight into the underlying disease and its management.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Becherucci ◽  
Viviana Palazzo ◽  
Luigi Cirillo ◽  
Benedetta Mazzinghi ◽  
Samuela Landini ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims Bartter (BS) and Gitelman syndrome (GS) are autosomal recessive rare inherited disorders characterized by hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis and secondary hyperaldosteronism. The primary defect is a genetically determined impairment of sodium chloride reabsorption in the renal tubule, thus resulting in salt loss, dehydration and acid-base homeostasis perturbations. Although the diagnosis can be suspected based on presenting features, the clinical diagnosis of BS and GS can be challenging, as they are rare and phenotypically overlapping. As a consequence, the current clinical classification lacks of specificity and genetic testing represents the gold standard for the diagnosis. Driven by the rapidly decreasing costs and turn-around time, next-generation sequencing technologies are increasingly utilized in diagnostics and research of inherited tubulopathies, including BS and GS. Recently, sequencing of selected gene panels provided the advantage of achieving high coverage of genes of interest at lower costs, providing high diagnostic yield and new insights into the phenotypic spectrum of these rare disorders. However, whole-exome (WES) is not routinely performed for the molecular diagnosis of BS and GS. The aim of our study was to assess the diagnostic performance of WES in BS and GS and to establish genotype-phenotype correlations. Method We performed WES in all consecutive patients referred for genetic testing with a clinical suspect of BS or GS. Variant prioritization was carried out according to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines (ACMG). Parents and first-degree relatives were included, whenever available. Demographic, clinical and laboratory data were collected retrospectively, in order to establish genotype-phenotype correlations. Results We enrolled 50 patients (22 males, 46 Caucasians) with a clinical diagnosis of BS (19), GS (24) or BS/GS (7). All the patients showed hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis at onset (serum bicarbonate=29.5 mEq/l ± 4.4, potassium= 2.7 mEq/l ± 0.6). The median age at clinical diagnosis was 7 years (range 0-67 years). Three patients had familial history of tubulopathies. WES showed pathogenic variants in 42/50 patients (84%), thus establishing a conclusive diagnosis. Interestingly, a dedicated analytic pipeline allowed us to identify copy number variations (CNVs) in 7/42 patients with a confirmed genetic diagnosis. In detail, WES allowed us to confirm the clinical diagnosis in 33/50 patients, with an improvement in classification in at least 14 cases (i.e. subtype I-V of BS). In 9 additional patients, genetic testing changed the clinical diagnosis: 6 patients with a clinical of BS turned out to have pathogenic variants in SLC12A3, resulting in GS; in 3 patients, genetic testing revised the clinical diagnosis indicating inherited disorders outside the BS/GS spectrum (HELIX syndrome, Primary familial hypoparatiroidism, Type 2 renal hypomagnesemia). Only 38% of patients with a genetic diagnosis of BS showed nephrocalcinosis. Strikingly, this was present in 8% of patients with GS. On the other hand, hypomagnesemia, a distinctive feature of GS, was similarly distributed among BS and GS patients (45% vs. 68%, respectively). Finally, although patients with GS showed a median age at onset higher than patients with BS, some overlap did exist, making differential diagnosis challenging at single-patient level. Conclusion The results of our study demonstrate that WES ensures a high diagnostic yield (84%) in patients with a clinical diagnosis of BS or GS, especially if coupled with analysis of CNVs. This approach showed to be useful in dealing with the phenotypic heterogeneity typical of these rare disorders, improving differential diagnosis by detecting phenocopies also outside the BS/GS spectrum, enabling additional specific work-up, genetic counseling, and screening of at-risk relatives.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina E. Hoei-Hansen ◽  
Marie L. B. Tygesen ◽  
Morten Dunø ◽  
John Vissing ◽  
Martin Ballegaard ◽  
...  

Abstract Aim The diagnostic workup in patients with delayed motor milestones suspected of having either myopathy or a congenital myasthenic syndrome is complex. Our hypothesis was that performance of a muscle biopsy and neurophysiology including stimulated single-fiber electromyography during an anesthetic procedure, combined with genetic testing has a high diagnostic quality. Materials and Methods Clinical and paraclinical data were retrospectively collected from 24 patients aged from 1 month to 10 years (median: 5.2 years). Results Neurophysiology examination was performed in all patients and was abnormal in 11 of 24. No patients had findings suggestive of a myasthenic syndrome. Muscle biopsy was performed in 21 of 24 and was normal in 16. Diagnostic findings included nemaline rods, inclusion bodies, fiber size variability, and type-II fiber atrophy. Genetic testing with either a gene panel or exome sequencing was performed in 18 of 24 patients, with pathogenic variants detected in ACTA1, NEB, SELENON, GRIN2B, SCN8A, and COMP genes. Conclusion Results supporting a neuromuscular abnormality were found in 15 of 24. In six patients (25%), we confirmed a genetic diagnosis and 12 had a clinical neuromuscular diagnosis. The study suggests that combined use of neurophysiology and muscle biopsy in cases where genetic testing does not provide a diagnosis can be useful in children with delayed motor milestones and clinical evidence of a neuromuscular disease.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 1763-1768
Author(s):  
Thomas Bourinaris ◽  
◽  
Damian Smedley ◽  
Valentina Cipriani ◽  
Isabella Sheikh ◽  
...  

AbstractHereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is a group of heterogeneous inherited degenerative disorders characterized by lower limb spasticity. Fifty percent of HSP patients remain yet genetically undiagnosed. The 100,000 Genomes Project (100KGP) is a large UK-wide initiative to provide genetic diagnosis to previously undiagnosed patients and families with rare conditions. Over 400 HSP families were recruited to the 100KGP. In order to obtain genetic diagnoses, gene-based burden testing was carried out for rare, predicted pathogenic variants using candidate variants from the Exomiser analysis of the genome sequencing data. A significant gene-disease association was identified for UBAP1 and HSP. Three protein truncating variants were identified in 13 patients from 7 families. All patients presented with juvenile form of pure HSP, with median age at onset 10 years, showing autosomal dominant inheritance or de novo occurrence. Additional clinical features included parkinsonism and learning difficulties, but their association with UBAP1 needs to be established.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (18) ◽  
pp. 6950
Author(s):  
Anastasiya V. Snezhkina ◽  
Dmitry V. Kalinin ◽  
Vladislav S. Pavlov ◽  
Elena N. Lukyanova ◽  
Alexander L. Golovyuk ◽  
...  

Carotid paragangliomas (CPGLs) are rare neuroendocrine tumors often associated with mutations in SDHx genes. The immunohistochemistry of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) subunits has been considered a useful instrument for the prediction of SDHx mutations in paragangliomas/pheochromocytomas. We compared the mutation status of SDHx genes with the immunohistochemical (IHC) staining of SDH subunits in CPGLs. To identify pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in SDHx genes, exome sequencing data analysis among 42 CPGL patients was performed. IHC staining of SDH subunits was carried out for all CPGLs studied. We encountered SDHx variants in 38% (16/42) of the cases in SDHx genes. IHC showed negative (5/15) or weak diffuse (10/15) SDHB staining in most tumors with variants in any of SDHx (94%, 15/16). In SDHA-mutated CPGL, SDHA expression was completely absent and weak diffuse SDHB staining was detected. Positive immunoreactivity for all SDH subunits was found in one case with a variant in SDHD. Notably, CPGL samples without variants in SDHx also demonstrated negative (2/11) or weak diffuse (9/11) SDHB staining (42%, 11/26). Obtained results indicate that SDH immunohistochemistry does not fully reflect the presence of mutations in the genes; diagnostic effectiveness of this method was 71%. However, given the high sensitivity of SDHB immunohistochemistry, it could be used for initial identifications of patients potentially carrying SDHx mutations for recommendation of genetic testing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 967-979 ◽  
Author(s):  
Revital Bronstein ◽  
Elizabeth E Capowski ◽  
Sudeep Mehrotra ◽  
Alex D Jansen ◽  
Daniel Navarro-Gomez ◽  
...  

Abstract Inherited retinal degenerations (IRDs) are at the focus of current genetic therapeutic advancements. For a genetic treatment such as gene therapy to be successful, an accurate genetic diagnostic is required. Genetic diagnostics relies on the assessment of the probability that a given DNA variant is pathogenic. Non-coding variants present a unique challenge for such assessments as compared to coding variants. For one, non-coding variants are present at much higher number in the genome than coding variants. In addition, our understanding of the rules that govern the non-coding regions of the genome is less complete than our understanding of the coding regions. Methods that allow for both the identification of candidate non-coding pathogenic variants and their functional validation may help overcome these caveats allowing for a greater number of patients to benefit from advancements in genetic therapeutics. We present here an unbiased approach combining whole genome sequencing (WGS) with patient-induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived retinal organoids (ROs) transcriptome analysis. With this approach, we identified and functionally validated a novel pathogenic non-coding variant in a small family with a previously unresolved genetic diagnosis.


Author(s):  
So Lee ◽  
Natalya Karp ◽  
Eugenio Zapata-Aldana ◽  
Bekim Sadikovic ◽  
Ping Yang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT: Background: Retrospective observational study to determine diagnostic yield and utility of genetic testing in children with epilepsy attending the Epilepsy Clinic at Children’s Hospital, London, Ontario, Canada. Methods: Children (birth–18 years) with epilepsy, who were seen in a 10-year period (January 1, 2008–March 31, 2018), were selected using defined inclusion criteria and by combining clinic datasets and laboratory records. Results: In total, 105 children (52.38% male and 47.61% female) with a variety of seizures were included in the analysis. Developmental delay was documented in the majority (83; 79.04%). Overall, a genetic diagnosis was established in 24 (22.85%) children. The diagnostic yield was highest for whole-exome sequencing (WES), at 35.71%. The yield from microarray was 8.33%. Yields of single-gene testing (18.60%) and targeted multigene panel testing (19.23%) were very similar. Several likely pathogenic and pathogenic variants not previously reported were identified and categorized using ACMG criteria. All diagnosed patients underwent a review of anti-seizure medication management and received counseling on natural history of their disease, possible complications, recurrence risks, and possibilities of preimplantation or prenatal genetic diagnosis. Conclusions: Our study confirms the multiple benefits of detecting a genetic etiology in children with epilepsy. Similar yields in single versus multigene testing underscore the importance of accurate clinical phenotyping. Patients with epilepsy and their caregivers in Ontario would undoubtedly benefit from repatriation of multigene panels and WES to the province.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Zhang ◽  
Regina H. Reynolds ◽  
Sonia Garcia-Ruiz ◽  
Emil K Gustavsson ◽  
Sid Sethi ◽  
...  

AbstractAlthough next-generation sequencing technologies have accelerated the discovery of novel gene-to-disease associations, many patients with suspected Mendelian diseases still leave the clinic without a genetic diagnosis. An estimated one third of these patients will have disorders caused by mutations impacting splicing. RNA-sequencing has been shown to be a promising diagnostic tool, however few methods have been developed to integrate RNA-sequencing data into the diagnostic pipeline. Here, we introduce dasper, an R/Bioconductor package that improves upon existing tools for detecting aberrant splicing by using machine learning to incorporate disruptions in exon-exon junction counts as well as coverage. dasper is designed for diagnostics, providing a rank-based report of how aberrant each splicing event looks, as well as including visualization functionality to facilitate interpretation. We validate dasper using 16 patient-derived fibroblast cell lines harbouring pathogenic variants known to impact splicing. We find that dasper is able to detect pathogenic splicing events with greater accuracy than existing LeafCutterMD or z-score approaches. Furthermore, by only applying a broad OMIM gene filter (without any variant-level filters), dasper is able to detect pathogenic splicing events within the top 10 most aberrant identified for each patient. Since using publicly available control data minimises costs associated with incorporating RNA-sequencing into diagnostic pipelines, we also investigate the use of 504 GTEx fibroblast samples as controls. We find that dasper leverages publicly available data effectively, ranking pathogenic splicing events in the top 25. Thus, we believe dasper can increase diagnostic yield for a pathogenic splicing variants and enable the efficient implementation of RNA-sequencing for diagnostics in clinical laboratories.


Author(s):  
E. V. Globa ◽  
N. B. Zelinska ◽  
V. A. Yengovatova ◽  
O. A. Horosha ◽  
N. L. Pogadayeva ◽  
...  

Central hypogonadism (CH) is a rare disease that occurs with a frequency of 1 : 8000 in women and 1 : 4000 in men. In 60 % of cases of CH, it is caused by Kallmann syndrome (KS) — a disease in which hypogonadotropic hypogonadism is combined with olfactory disorders (hyposmia or anosmia).Aim — to study clinical features, principles of diagnosis of CH/KS and evaluation of the effectiveness of various treatment. Materials and methods. 4 cases with CH/KS from three families had been described. Laboratory and instrumental investigations were used to confirm the KS; genetic diagnosis was performed using targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS hypogonadotropic panel).Results. Patients with CH/KS had a wide spectrum of genital disorders (micropenia, cryptorchidism, microorchidism), which appeared at different age. Extragenital pathology was found in three of four patients: namely disorders of kidney, eye, respiratory system, hypoparathyroidism, hypothyroidism and epilepsy. It should be noted that all patients had olfactory disorders, which appeared in two of them only during a detailed survey after receiving genetic testing. In all patients, the diagnosis of CH was confirmed by the test with triptorelin 0.1. Also, all patients who underwent densitometry were found to have significant osteoporosis. In three patients, genetic testing confirmed hemizygous pathogenic variants in ANOS1 gene, while in one patient a heterozygous variant in FGFR1 gene was confirmed. After treatment with chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), two patients responded positively, with a descent of the testicles into the scrotum and an increase of testosterone level and testicular volume. However, in the other two patients there was no positive trend in treatment with HCG, therefore, the use of recombinant human FSH (r-FSH) in the form of priming and then further — in combination with HCG may be considered. Although the presence of severe microorchidism, cryptorchidism, low levels of AMH, inhibin B, and an unsatisfactory response to the previous treatment with HCG indicates extremely unfavorable prognosis. Therefore, in order to achieve the fertility in some patients with CH/KS, the most likely attempt is the use of assisted reproductive technologies.Conclusions. The leading problem in the treatment of patients with KS is their different response to hormone therapy, including different manifestations of the disease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Halman ◽  
Egor Dolzhenko ◽  
Alicia Oshlack

AbstractShort tandem repeats (STRs) are highly polymorphic with high mutation rates and expansions of STRs have been implicated as the causal variant in diseases. The application of genome sequencing in patients has recently allowed many new discoveries with over 50 disease causing loci known to date. There are several tools which allow genotyping of STRs from high-throughput sequencing (HTS) data. However, running these tools out of the box only allow around half of the known disease-causing loci to be genotyped, with lengths often limited to either read or fragment length which is less than the pathogenic cut-off for some diseases. While analysis tools can be customised to genotype extra loci, this requires proficiency in bioinformatics to set up, use, and analyse the resulting data, limiting their widespread usage by other researchers and clinicians.To address these issues, we have created a new software called STRipy that has an intuitive graphical interface and requires no specific skills for usage, thus significantly simplifying detection of STRs expansions from human HTS data. STRipy is able to target all known disease-causing STRs with genotyping performed with an established tool, ExpansionHunter, that is incorporated into the software. We have created additional functionality into STRipy to work with long alleles exceeding the fragment length.STRipy was validated using over 60 thousand simulated samples and was shown to work on whole genome sequencing of biological samples with pathogenic variants. Finally, we have used STRipy to acquire genotypes of pathogenic loci for thousands of samples from various populations which are provided to the user along with the data from the literature to assist with results interpretation. We believe the simplicity and breadth of STRipy will increase the testing of STR diseases in current datasets resulting in further diagnoses of rare diseases caused by STRs expansions.


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