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Article
Clinical and technical assessment of MedExome vs. NGS panels in patients with suspected genetic disorders in Southwestern Ontario.
Journal of human genetics
  • Erfan Aref-Eshghi
  • Jennifer Kerkhof
  • Deana Alexis Carere
  • Michael Volodarsky
  • Pratibha Bhai
  • Samantha Colaiacovo
  • Maha Saleh
  • Michelle Caudle
  • Natalya Karp
  • Chitra Prasad
  • Tugce Balci
  • Hanxin Lin
  • Craig Campbell
  • Victoria Mok Siu
  • Bekim Sadikovic
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2021
URL with Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1038/s10038-020-00860-3
Disciplines
Abstract

The adaptation of a broad genomic sequencing approach in the clinical setting has been accompanied by considerations regarding the clinical utility, technical performance, and diagnostic yield compared to targeted genetic approaches. We have developed MedExome, an integrated framework for sequencing, variant calling (SNVs, Indels, and CNVs), and clinical assessment of ~4600 medically relevant genes. We compared the technical performance of MedExome with the whole-exome and targeted gene-panel sequencing, assessed the reasons for discordance, and evaluated the added clinical yield of MedExome in a cohort of unresolved subjects suspected of genetic disease. Our analysis showed that despite a higher average read depth in panels (3058 vs. 855), MedExome yielded full coverage of the enriched regions (>20X) and 99% variant concordance rate with panels. The discordance rate was associated with low-complexity regions, high-GC content, and low allele fractions, observed in both platforms. MedExome yielded full sensitivity in detecting clinically actionable variants, and the assessment of 138 patients with suspected genetic conditions resulted in 76 clinical reports (31 full [22.1%], 3 partial, and 42 uncertain/possible molecular diagnoses). MedExome sequencing has comparable performance in variant detection to gene panels. Added diagnostic yield justifies expanded implementation of broad genomic approaches in unresolved patients; however, cost-benefit and health systems impact warrants assessment.

Notes

Available at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s10038-020-00860-3

Citation Information
Erfan Aref-Eshghi, Jennifer Kerkhof, Deana Alexis Carere, Michael Volodarsky, et al.. "Clinical and technical assessment of MedExome vs. NGS panels in patients with suspected genetic disorders in Southwestern Ontario." Journal of human genetics Vol. 66 Iss. 5 (2021) p. 451 - 464
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/craig-campbell/34/