Journal
GENETICS IN MEDICINE
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 1689-1696Publisher
SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41436-021-01193-y
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Funding
- Department of Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital
- NIDDK [K23DK114551]
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The study found that clinical genome sequencing (cGS) as a first genetic test showed similar diagnostic yield compared to standard-of-care genetic testing. More studies on other variant types and implementation challenges are needed to further support the adoption of broad-scale cGS.
Purpose To evaluate the diagnostic yield and clinical relevance of clinical genome sequencing (cGS) as a first genetic test for patients with suspected monogenic disorders. Methods We conducted a prospective randomized study with pediatric and adult patients recruited from genetics clinics at Massachusetts General Hospital who were undergoing planned genetic testing. Participants were randomized into two groups: standard-of-care genetic testing (SOC) only or SOC and cGS. Results Two hundred four participants were enrolled, 202 were randomized to one of the intervention arms, and 99 received cGS. In total, cGS returned 16 molecular diagnoses that fully or partially explained the indication for testing in 16 individuals (16.2% of the cohort, 95% confidence interval [CI] 8.9-23.4%), which was not significantly different from SOC (18.2%, 95% CI 10.6-25.8%, P = 0.71). An additional eight molecular diagnoses reported by cGS had uncertain relevance to the participant's phenotype. Nevertheless, referring providers considered 20/24 total cGS molecular diagnoses (83%) to be explanatory for clinical features or worthy of additional workup. Conclusion cGS is technically suitable as a first genetic test. In our cohort, diagnostic yield was not significantly different from SOC. Further studies addressing other variant types and implementation challenges are needed to support feasibility and utility of broad-scale cGS adoption.
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