Prenatal exome sequencing analysis in fetal structural anomalies detected by ultrasonography (PAGE): a cohort study
Wellcome Sanger Institute · National Health Service · +32 more institutions
Abstract
Fetal structural anomalies, which are detected by ultrasonography, have a range of genetic causes, including chromosomal aneuploidy, copy number variations (CNVs; which are detectable by chromosomal microarrays), and pathogenic sequence variants in developmental genes. Testing for aneuploidy and CNVs is routine during the investigation of fetal structural anomalies, but there is little information on the clinical usefulness of genome-wide next-generation sequencing in the prenatal setting. We therefore aimed to evaluate the proportion of fetuses with structural abnormalities that had identifiable variants in genes associated with developmental disorders when assessed with whole-exome sequencing (WES).
In this prospective cohort study, two groups in Birmingham and London recruited patients from 34 fetal medicine units in England and Scotland. We used whole-exome sequencing (WES) to evaluate the presence of genetic variants in developmental disorder genes (diagnostic genetic variants) in a cohort of fetuses with structural anomalies and samples from their parents, after exclusion of aneuploidy and large CNVs. Women were eligible for inclusion if they were undergoing invasive testing for identified nuchal translucency or structural anomalies in their fetus, as detected by ultrasound after 11 weeks of gestation. The partners of these women also had to consent to participate. Sequencing results were interpreted with a targeted virtual gene panel for developmental disorders that comprised 1628 genes. Genetic results related to fetal structural anomaly phenotypes were then validated and reported postnatally. The primary endpoint, which was assessed in all fetuses, was the detection of diagnostic genetic variants considered to have caused the fetal developmental anomaly.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 140.37
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 49
Authors
108- JLJenny Lord
Wellcome Sanger Institute
- DMDominic McMullan
National Health Service, Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust
- RYRuth Y. Eberhardt
Wellcome Sanger Institute
- GRGabriele Rinck
Wellcome Sanger Institute
- SHSusan Hamilton
Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust, National Health Service
Topics & keywords
- Exome sequencing
- Copy-number variation
- Aneuploidy
- Cohort
- Exome
- Genetics
- Genetic testing
- Fetus