AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates whether genetic diagnosis through next generation sequencing (NGS) helps families who have a child with a rare recessive brain disease reduce the risk of recurrence in future pregnancies.
  • It involved analyzing data from families diagnosed between 2010 and 2016, where some couples opted for fetal genotyping to inform decisions about carrying pregnancies to term or electively terminating them.
  • Results showed that families who used genetic testing had a lower than expected recurrence rate of disease in their subsequent pregnancies, dropping from the expected 25% to only 12%.

Article Abstract

Background: The causes for thousands of individually rare recessive diseases have been discovered since the adoption of next generation sequencing (NGS). Following the molecular diagnosis in older children in a family, parents could use this information to opt for fetal genotyping in subsequent pregnancies, which could inform decisions about elective termination of pregnancy. The use of NGS diagnostic sequencing in families has not been demonstrated to yield benefit in subsequent pregnancies to reduce recurrence. Here we evaluated whether genetic diagnosis in older children in families supports reduction in recurrence of recessive neurogenetic disease.

Methods: Retrospective study involving families with a child with a recessive pediatric brain disease (rPBD) that underwent NGS-based molecular diagnosis. Prenatal molecular testing was offered to couples in which a molecular diagnosis was made, to help couples seeking to prevent recurrence. With this information, families made decisions about elective termination. Pregnancies that were carried to term were assessed for the health of child and mother, and compared with historic recurrence risk of recessive disease.

Results: Between 2010 and 2016, 1172 families presented with a child a likely rPBD, 526 families received a molecular diagnosis, 91 families returned to the clinic with 101 subsequent pregnancies, and 84 opted for fetal genotyping. Sixty tested negative for recurrence for the biallelic mutation in the fetus, and all, except for one spontaneous abortion, carried to term, and were unaffected at follow-up. Of 24 that genotyped positive for the biallelic mutation, 16 were electively terminated, and 8 were carried to term and showed features of disease similar to that of the older affected sibling(s). Among the 101 pregnancies, disease recurrence in living offspring deviated from the expected 25% to the observed 12% ([95% CI 0·04 to 0·20], p = 0·011).

Conclusions: Molecular diagnosis in an older child, coupled with prenatal fetal genotyping in subsequent pregnancies and genetic counselling, allows families to make informed decisions to reduce recessive neurogenetic disease recurrence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7218834PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12920-020-0714-1DOI Listing

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