AI Article Synopsis

  • - The Acute Care Genomics program in Australia offered whole-genome sequencing to 290 families of critically ill children over 2 years, achieving an average result time of 2.9 days and a diagnostic yield of 47%.
  • - Further analysis and advanced sequencing methods led to 19 additional diagnoses, increasing the overall diagnostic yield to 54%, with various genetic issues identified.
  • - Among the diagnosed patients, 77% experienced changes in critical care management, significantly influencing treatment options, surgeries, and palliative care in 60% of cases, highlighting the effectiveness of integrating advanced genomic approaches into regular diagnostic practices.

Article Abstract

Critically ill infants and children with rare diseases need equitable access to rapid and accurate diagnosis to direct clinical management. Over 2 years, the Acute Care Genomics program provided whole-genome sequencing to 290 families whose critically ill infants and children were admitted to hospitals throughout Australia with suspected genetic conditions. The average time to result was 2.9 d and diagnostic yield was 47%. We performed additional bioinformatic analyses and transcriptome sequencing in all patients who remained undiagnosed. Long-read sequencing and functional assays, ranging from clinically accredited enzyme analysis to bespoke quantitative proteomics, were deployed in selected cases. This resulted in an additional 19 diagnoses and an overall diagnostic yield of 54%. Diagnostic variants ranged from structural chromosomal abnormalities through to an intronic retrotransposon, disrupting splicing. Critical care management changed in 120 diagnosed patients (77%). This included major impacts, such as informing precision treatments, surgical and transplant decisions and palliation, in 94 patients (60%). Our results provide preliminary evidence of the clinical utility of integrating multi-omic approaches into mainstream diagnostic practice to fully realize the potential of rare disease genomic testing in a timely manner.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10353936PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-023-02401-9DOI Listing

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