Abstract

BackgroundInherited peripheral neuropathy (IPN) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders with more than 90 genes associated with the different subtypes. Sequential gene screening is gradually being replaced by next generation sequencing (NGS) applications.MethodsWe designed and validated a targeted NGS panel assay including 56 genes associated with known causes of IPN. We report our findings following NGS panel testing of 448 patients with different types of clinically-suspected IPN.ResultsGenetic diagnosis was achieved in 137 patients (31 %) and involved 195 pathogenic variants in 31 genes. 93 patients had pathogenic variants in genes where a resulting phenotype follows dominant inheritance, 32 in genes where this would follow recessive inheritance, and 12 presented with X-linked disease.Almost half of the diagnosed patients (64) had a pathogenic variant either in genes not previously available for routine diagnostic testing in a UK laboratory (50 patients) or in genes whose primary clinical association was not IPN (14).Seven patients had a pathogenic variant in a gene not hitherto indicated from their phenotype and three patients had more than one pathogenic variant, explaining their complex phenotype and providing information essential for accurate prediction of recurrence risks.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that targeted gene panel testing is an unbiased approach which overcomes the limitations imposed by limited existing knowledge for rare genes, reveals high heterogeneity, and provides high diagnostic yield. It is therefore a highly efficient and cost effective tool for achieving a genetic diagnosis for IPN.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12881-015-0224-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Inherited peripheral neuropathy (IPN) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders with more than 90 genes associated with the different subtypes

  • Patients Blood or DNA samples from patients referred by neurologists and clinical geneticists were accepted for testing when the UK Genetic Testing Network (UKGTN) approval criteria were met

  • 99.81 % of the targeted region was covered to a minimum of 30x reads, and 99.86 % to a minimum of 15x

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Summary

Introduction

Inherited peripheral neuropathy (IPN) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders with more than 90 genes associated with the different subtypes. Inherited peripheral neuropathy (IPN) is the most common group of inherited neurological disorders with an estimated prevalence of 1 in 2500 individuals [1]. It is clinically and genetically heterogeneous; with over 90 genes and loci implicated in the normal function of the myelinated axons of the peripheral nervous system. A single gene may be implicated in different phenotypes and present with different modes of inheritance, presenting a challenge to diagnose patients with specific types of IPN [2, 3]

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