4.6 Article

Value of systematic genetic screening of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2020-325014

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  1. NIHR [NF-SI-0617-10077]
  2. Motor Neurone Disease Association [AMBRoSIA 972-797, NECTAR 974-797]
  3. NIHR Yorkshire and Humber Clinical Research Network
  4. NIHR Sheffield Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) [IS-BRC-1215-20017]
  5. NIHR Sheffield Clinical Research Facility (CRF)
  6. MRC [G0600974, MR/R024804/1, MR/S006508/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Routine genetic sequencing in a cohort of 100 ALS patients revealed that 21% carried pathogenic or likely pathogenic mutations, with 93% lacking family history. An additional 21% had variants of uncertain significance in ALS-associated genes. The presence of multiple genetic variants in known ALS-linked genes may impact disease onset age.
Objective The clinical utility of routine genetic sequencing in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is uncertain. Our aim was to determine whether routine targeted sequencing of 44 ALS-relevant genes would have a significant impact on disease subclassification and clinical care. Methods We performed targeted sequencing of a 44-gene panel in a prospective case series of 100 patients with ALS recruited consecutively from the Sheffield Motor Neuron Disorders Clinic, UK. All participants were diagnosed with ALS by a specialist Consultant Neurologist. 7/100 patients had familial ALS, but the majority were apparently sporadic cases. Results 21% of patients with ALS carried a confirmed pathogenic or likely pathogenic mutation, of whom 93% had no family history of ALS. 15% met the inclusion criteria for a current ALS genetic-therapy trial. 5/21 patients with a pathogenic mutation had an additional variant of uncertain significance (VUS). An additional 21% of patients with ALS carried a VUS in an ALS-associated gene. Overall, 13% of patients carried more than one genetic variant (pathogenic or VUS). Patients with ALS carrying two variants developed disease at a significantly earlier age compared with patients with a single variant (median age of onset=56 vs 60 years, p=0.0074). Conclusions Routine screening for ALS-associated pathogenic mutations in a specialised ALS referral clinic will impact clinical care in 21% of cases. An additional 21% of patients have variants in the ALS gene panel currently of unconfirmed significance after removing non-specific or predicted benign variants. Overall, variants within known ALS-linked genes are of potential clinical importance in 42% of patients.

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