Publication | Open Access
Improving the diagnostic yield of exome-sequencing, by predicting gene-phenotype associations using large-scale gene expression analysis
26
Citations
44
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
Unknown Disease GenesGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyGenomicsDiagnostic YieldGene Expression ProfilingGenetic MedicineClinical GeneticsGenome-wide Association StudyHpo TermsBiostatisticsWhole Genome StudiesPublic HealthMolecular DiagnosticsMicroarray Data AnalysisVariant InterpretationPersonal GenomicsOmicsBioinformaticsSequencingGenomic MedicineFunctional GenomicsCandidate Gene AnalysisAutomated PrioritizationGene-phenotype AssociationsNext-generation SequencingComputational BiologySystems BiologyMedicine
Abstract Clinical interpretation of exome and genome sequencing data remains challenging and time consuming, with many variants with unknown effects found in genes with unknown functions. Automated prioritization of these variants can improve the speed of current diagnostics and identify previously unknown disease genes. Here, we used 31,499 RNA-seq samples to predict the phenotypic consequences of variants in genes. We developed GeneNetwork Assisted Diagnostic Optimization (GADO), a tool that uses these predictions in combination with a patient’s phenotype, denoted using HPO terms, to prioritize identified variants and ease interpretation. GADO is unique because it does not rely on existing knowledge of a gene and can therefore prioritize variants missed by tools that rely on existing annotations or pathway membership. In a validation trial on patients with a known genetic diagnosis, GADO prioritized the causative gene within the top 3 for 41% of the cases. Applying GADO to a cohort of 38 patients without genetic diagnosis, yielded new candidate genes for seven cases. Our results highlight the added value of GADO ( www.genenetwork.nl ) for increasing diagnostic yield and for implicating previously unknown disease-causing genes.
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