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Predictors of the utility of clinical exome sequencing as a first-tier genetic test in patients with Mendelian phenotypes: results from a referral center study on 603 consecutive cases. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Clinical exome sequencing (CES) is a cost-effective method for analyzing disease-related genes, showing a diagnostic yield of about 37.6% in a study of 603 patients with various Mendelian phenotypes.
  • Key factors that predicted the utility of CES included the presence of severe phenotypes, having at least one family member tested, and prescriptions made by genetic experts.
  • The findings from this study suggest that using CES as a first-level genetic test can enhance diagnostic efficiency in detecting monogenic disorders.

Article Abstract

Background: Clinical exome sequencing (CES) provides a comprehensive and effective analysis of relevant disease-associated genes in a cost-effective manner compared to whole exome sequencing. Although several studies have focused on the diagnostic yield of CES, no study has assessed predictors of CES utility among patients with various Mendelian phenotypes. We assessed the effectiveness of CES as a first-level genetic test for molecular diagnosis in patients with a Mendelian phenotype and explored independent predictors of the clinical utility of CES.

Results: Between January 2016 and December 2019, 603 patients (426 probands and 177 siblings) underwent CES at the Department of Molecular Medicine of the University Hospital of Nancy. The median age of the probands was 34 years (IQR, 12-48), and the proportion of males was 46.9% (200/426). Adults and children represented 64.8% (276/426) and 35.2% (150/426), respectively. The median test-to-report time was 5.6 months (IQR, 4.1-7.2). CES revealed 203 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in 160 patients, corresponding to a diagnostic yield of 37.6% (160/426). Independent predictors of CES utility were criteria strongly suggestive of an extreme phenotype, including pediatric presentation and patient phenotypes associated with an increased risk of a priori probability of a monogenic disorder, the inclusion of at least one family member in addition to the proband, and a CES prescription performed by an expert in the field of rare genetic disorders.

Conclusions: Based on a large dataset of consecutive patients with various Mendelian phenotypes referred for CES as a first-tier genetic test, we report a diagnostic yield of ~ 40% and several independent predictors of CES utility that might improve CES diagnostic efficiency.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9899384PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40246-023-00455-xDOI Listing

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