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      Resolution of Disease Phenotypes Resulting from Multilocus Genomic Variation

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND

          Whole-exome sequencing can provide insight into the relationship between observed clinical phenotypes and underlying genotypes.

          METHODS

          We conducted a retrospective analysis of data from a series of 7374 consecutive unrelated patients who had been referred to a clinical diagnostic laboratory for whole-exome sequencing; our goal was to determine the frequency and clinical characteristics of patients for whom more than one molecular diagnosis was reported. The phenotypic similarity between molecularly diagnosed pairs of diseases was calculated with the use of terms from the Human Phenotype Ontology.

          RESULTS

          A molecular diagnosis was rendered for 2076 of 7374 patients (28.2%); among these patients, 101 (4.9%) had diagnoses that involved two or more disease loci. We also analyzed parental samples, when available, and found that de novo variants accounted for 67.8% (61 of 90) of pathogenic variants in autosomal dominant disease genes and 51.7% (15 of 29) of pathogenic variants in X-linked disease genes; both variants were de novo in 44.7% (17 of 38) of patients with two monoallelic variants. Causal copy-number variants were found in 12 patients (11.9%) with multiple diagnoses. Phenotypic similarity scores were significantly lower among patients in whom the phenotype resulted from two distinct mendelian disorders that affected different organ systems (50 patients) than among patients with disorders that had overlapping phenotypic features (30 patients) (median score, 0.21 vs. 0.36; P = 1.77×10 −7).

          CONCLUSIONS

          In our study, we found multiple molecular diagnoses in 4.9% of cases in which whole-exome sequencing was informative. Our results show that structured clinical ontologies can be used to determine the degree of overlap between two mendelian diseases in the same patient; the diseases can be distinct or overlapping. Distinct disease phenotypes affect different organ systems, whereas overlapping disease phenotypes are more likely to be caused by two genes encoding proteins that interact within the same pathway. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation.)

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0255562
          5985
          N Engl J Med
          N. Engl. J. Med.
          The New England journal of medicine
          0028-4793
          1533-4406
          5 February 2017
          07 December 2016
          05 January 2017
          05 July 2017
          : 376
          : 1
          : 21-31
          Affiliations
          Departments of Molecular and Human Genetics (J.E.P., T.H., P.L., J.A.R., Z.H.C.A., M.W., W.B., R.X., F.X., A.L.B., D.M.M., R.A.G., C.M.E., V.R.S., C.A.S., S.E.P., Y.Y., J.R.L.) and Pediatrics (S.E.P., J.R.L.), Baylor Genetics (P.L., M.W., W.B., R.X., Y.D., F.X., R.A.G., C.M.E., Y.Y.), Program in Structural and Computational Biology and Molecular Biophysics (R.A.J.), and Human Genome Sequencing Center (D.M.M., R.A.G., E.B., S.E.P., J.R.L.), Baylor College of Medicine, the Human Genetics Center, University of Texas Health Science Center (E.B.), and the Department of Pediatrics (S.E.P., J.R.L.) and Texas Children’s Cancer Center (S.E.P.), Texas Children’s Hospital — all in Houston
          Author notes
          Address reprint requests to Dr. Posey or Dr. Lupski at the Baylor College of Medicine, 1 Baylor Plaza, Rm. 604B, Houston, TX 77030, or at Jennifer.posey@ 123456bcm.edu or jlupski@ 123456bcm.edu

          Drs. Posey and Harel contributed equally to this article.

          Article
          PMC5335876 PMC5335876 5335876 nihpa848279
          10.1056/NEJMoa1516767
          5335876
          27959697
          97b4f5a8-a371-4cd3-a4f8-bf12db5196f9
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