AI Article Synopsis

  • Molecular diagnosis using singleton exome sequencing (sES) in fetuses with multiple congenital abnormalities (MCA) shows a lower diagnostic yield (20%) compared to live births with developmental issues (30%), indicating potential underestimation of genetic variant impact in fetal cases.
  • In a study of 95 fetuses with MCA, a genotype-first strategy was employed, blending variant analysis and bioinformatics with reverse phenotyping to determine the clinical significance of genetic variations.
  • The results revealed causal variants in 25% of fetuses, unknown significance variants in 8%, and identified six novel candidate genes, highlighting the importance of prenatal genetic studies for understanding complex disorders.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Molecular diagnosis based on singleton exome sequencing (sES) is particularly challenging in fetuses with multiple congenital abnormalities (MCA). Indeed, some studies reveal a diagnostic yield of about 20%, far lower than in live birth individuals showing developmental abnormalities (30%), suggesting that standard analyses, based on the correlation between clinical hallmarks described in postnatal syndromic presentations and genotype, may underestimate the impact of the genetic variants identified in fetal analyses.

Methods: We performed sES in 95 fetuses with MCA. Blind to phenotype, we applied a genotype-first approach consisting of combined analyses based on variants annotation and bioinformatics predictions followed by reverse phenotyping. Initially applied to OMIM-morbid genes, analyses were then extended to all genes. We complemented our approach by using reverse phenotyping, variant segregation analysis, bibliographic search and data sharing in order to establish the clinical significance of the prioritised variants.

Results: sES rapidly identified causal variant in 24/95 fetuses (25%), variants of unknown significance in OMIM genes in 8/95 fetuses (8%) and six novel candidate genes in 6/95 fetuses (6%).

Conclusions: This method, based on a genotype-first approach followed by reverse phenotyping, shed light on unexpected fetal phenotype-genotype correlations, emphasising the relevance of prenatal studies to reveal extreme clinical presentations associated with well-known Mendelian disorders.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2020-106867DOI Listing

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