Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Comprehensive molecular diagnostics are highly dependent on the technical performance of next-generation sequencing (NGS) pipelines, which are assessed by data quality, cost, turnaround time, and accuracy of detecting a range of sequence and copy number variants. Methods A dataset of 285 clinically validated cases (205 retrospective and 80 prospective), carrying complex sequence and copy number variants and thousands of genetic polymorphisms underwent a clinical validation of the KAPA HyperChoice target enrichment system with parallel sample fidelity assessment across a number of NGS panels. The analysis included assessment of peripheral blood, urine, muscle and FFPE tissues. Results High-quality and exceptionally uniform data with 100% coverage of all targeted panels were obtained, resulting in complete sensitivity and specificity for all variant types across nearly all panels and tissue types. Overall reduction in cost and turnaround times was obtained with the implementation of a parallel genotyping sample fidelity system. Conclusion Results of the laboratory quality improvement study focused on a single NGS pipeline that includes both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes demonstrated utility in the clinical setting to assess a range of referral reasons, necessary due to the complex molecular etiology of human genetic disorders, while reducing costs and turnaround times.

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