The Oculome Panel Test Next-Generation Sequencing to Diagnose a Diverse Range of Genetic Developmental Eye Disorders

Patel A.; Hayward J.D.; Tailor V.; Nyanhete R.; Ahlfors H.; Gabriel C.; Jannini T.B.; Abbou-Rayyah Y.; Henderson R.; Nischal K.K.; Islam L.; Bitner-Glindzicz M.; Hurst J.; Valdivia, L. E.; Zanolli M.; et. al.

Abstract

Purpose: To develop a comprehensive next-generation sequencing panel assay that screens genes known to cause developmental eye disorders and inherited eye disease and to evaluate its diagnostic yield in a pediatric cohort with malformations of the globe, anterior segment anomalies, childhood glaucoma, or a combination thereof. Design: Evaluation of diagnostic test. Participants: Two hundred seventy-seven children, 0 to 16 years of age, diagnosed with nonsyndromic or syndromic developmental eye defects without a genetic diagnosis. Methods: We developed a new oculome panel using a custom-designed Agilent SureSelect QXT target capture method (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA) to capture and perform parallel high-throughput sequencing analysis of 429 genes associated with eye disorders. Bidirectional Sanger sequencing confirmed suspected pathogenic variants. Main Outcome Measures: Collated clinical details and oculome molecular genetic results. Results: The oculome design covers 429 known eye disease genes; these are subdivided into 5 overlapping virtual subpanels for anterior segment developmental anomalies including glaucoma (ASDA; 59 genes), microphthalmia-anophthalmia-coloboma (MAC; 86 genes), congenital cataracts and lens-associated conditions (70 genes), retinal dystrophies (RET; 235 genes), and albinism (15 genes), as well as additional genes implicated in optic atrophy and complex strabismus (10 genes). Panel development and testing included analyzing 277 clinical samples and 3 positive control samples using Illumine sequencing platforms; more than 30 x read depth was achieved for 99.5% of the targeted 1.77-Mb region. Bioinformatics analysis performed using a pipeline based on Freebayes and ExomeDepth to identify coding sequence and copy number variants, respectively, resulted in a definitive diagnosis in 68 of 277 samples, with variability in diagnostic yield between phenotypic subgroups: MAC, 8.2% (8 of 98 cases solved); ASDA, 24.8% (28 of 113 cases solved); other or syndromic, 37.5% (3 of 8 cases solved); RET, 42.8% (21 of 49 cases solved); and congenital cataracts and lens-associated conditions, 88.9% (8 of 9 cases solved). Conclusions: The oculome test diagnoses a comprehensive range of genetic conditions affecting the development of the eye, potentially replacing protracted and costly multidisciplinary assessments and allowing for faster targeted management. The oculome enabled molecular diagnosis of a significant number of cases in our sample cohort of varied ocular birth defects. (C) 2019 by the American Academy of Ophthalmology

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Título según WOS: The Oculome Panel Test Next-Generation Sequencing to Diagnose a Diverse Range of Genetic Developmental Eye Disorders
Título según SCOPUS: The Oculome Panel Test: Next-Generation Sequencing to Diagnose a Diverse Range of Genetic Developmental Eye Disorders
Título de la Revista: OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volumen: 126
Número: 6
Editorial: Elsevier Science Inc.
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 888
Página final: 907
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.ophtha.2018.12.050

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS