4.5 Article

Clinical exome sequencing is a powerful tool in the diagnostic flow of monogenic kidney diseases: an Italian experience

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEPHROLOGY
卷 34, 期 5, 页码 1767-1781

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s40620-020-00898-8

关键词

Next-generation sequencing; Chronic kidney failure; Transplantation; Renal monogenic disease

资金

  1. Universita degli Studi di Torino within the CRUI-CARE Agreement
  2. Italian Ministry of Education-University and Research-MIUR, Progetto strategico di Eccellenza Dipartimentale [D15D18000410001]
  3. University of Turin Dept. of Medical Sciences ex-60% Ricerca Locale 2018grant, RILO

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Through a multidisciplinary cooperative effort, an analytical pipeline was built to perform clinical exome sequencing on patients with chronic kidney disease with a clinical suspicion of a monogenic condition or without a well-defined diagnosis, resulting in identifying genetic variants potentially explaining the phenotype in approximately 56.5% of cases. These results underscore the importance of clinical exome sequencing as a versatile and highly useful tool for genetic diagnosis of kidney diseases.
Background A considerable minority of patients on waiting lists for kidney transplantation either have no diagnosis (and fall into the subset of undiagnosed cases) because kidney biopsy was not performed or histological findings were non-specific, or do not fall into any well-defined clinical category. Some of these patients might be affected by a previously unrecognised monogenic disease. Methods Through a multidisciplinary cooperative effort, we built an analytical pipeline to identify patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) with a clinical suspicion of a monogenic condition or without a well-defined diagnosis. Following the stringent phenotypical and clinical characterization required by the flowchart, candidates meeting these criteria were further investigated by clinical exome sequencing followed by in silico analysis of 225 kidney-disease-related genes. Results By using an ad hoc web-based platform, we enrolled 160 patients from 13 different Nephrology and Genetics Units located across the Piedmont region over 15 months. A preliminary remote evaluation based on well-defined inclusion criteria allowed us to define eligibility for NGS analysis. Among the 138 recruited patients, 52 (37.7%) were children and 86 (62.3%) were adults. Up to 48% of them had a positive family history for kidney disease. Overall, applying this workflow led to the identification of genetic variants potentially explaining the phenotype in 78 (56.5%) cases. Conclusions These results underline the importance of clinical exome sequencing as a versatile and highly useful, non-invasive tool for genetic diagnosis of kidney diseases. Identifying patients who can benefit from targeted therapies, and improving the management of organ transplantation are further expected applications.

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