• CMAJ · Aug 2016

    Next-generation sequencing for diagnosis of rare diseases in the neonatal intensive care unit.

    • Hussein Daoud, Stephanie M Luco, Rui Li, Eric Bareke, Chandree Beaulieu, Olga Jarinova, Nancy Carson, Sarah M Nikkel, Gail E Graham, Julie Richer, Christine Armour, Dennis E Bulman, Pranesh Chakraborty, Michael Geraghty, Matthew A Lines, Thierry Lacaze-Masmonteil, Jacek Majewski, Kym M Boycott, and David A Dyment.
    • Department of Genetics (Daoud, Luco, Beaulieu, Jarinova, Carson, Nikkel, Graham, Richer, Armour, Boycott, Dyment) and Department of Pediatrics (Bulman, Chakraborty, Geraghty, Lines, Lacaze-Masmonteil), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, Ont.; McGill University (Li, Bareke, Majewski) and Genome Quebec Innovation Centre (Li, Bareke, Majewski), Montréal, Que.
    • CMAJ. 2016 Aug 9; 188 (11): E254-E260.

    BackgroundRare diseases often present in the first days and weeks of life and may require complex management in the setting of a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Exhaustive consultations and traditional genetic or metabolic investigations are costly and often fail to arrive at a final diagnosis when no recognizable syndrome is suspected. For this pilot project, we assessed the feasibility of next-generation sequencing as a tool to improve the diagnosis of rare diseases in newborns in the NICU.MethodsWe retrospectively identified and prospectively recruited newborns and infants admitted to the NICU of the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario and the Ottawa Hospital, General Campus, who had been referred to the medical genetics or metabolics inpatient consult service and had features suggesting an underlying genetic or metabolic condition. DNA from the newborns and parents was enriched for a panel of clinically relevant genes and sequenced on a MiSeq sequencing platform (Illumina Inc.). The data were interpreted with a standard informatics pipeline and reported to care providers, who assessed the importance of genotype-phenotype correlations.ResultsOf 20 newborns studied, 8 received a diagnosis on the basis of next-generation sequencing (diagnostic rate 40%). The diagnoses were renal tubular dysgenesis, SCN1A-related encephalopathy syndrome, myotubular myopathy, FTO deficiency syndrome, cranioectodermal dysplasia, congenital myasthenic syndrome, autosomal dominant intellectual disability syndrome type 7 and Denys-Drash syndrome.InterpretationThis pilot study highlighted the potential of next-generation sequencing to deliver molecular diagnoses rapidly with a high success rate. With broader use, this approach has the potential to alter health care delivery in the NICU.© 2016 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors.

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