Abstract

Neuroinflammatory disorders are a range of severe neurological disorders causing brain and spinal inflammation and are now increasingly recognized in the pediatric population. They are often characterized by marked genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity, complicating diagnostic work in clinical practice and molecular diagnosis. To develop and evaluate a next-generation sequencing panel targeting genes causing neuroinflammation or mimicking neuroinflammation. Cohort study in which a total of 257 genes associated with monogenic neuroinflammation and/or cerebral vasculopathy, including monogenic noninflammatory diseases mimicking these entities, were selected. A customized enrichment capture array, the neuroinflammation gene panel (NIP), was created. Targeted high-coverage sequencing was applied to DNA samples taken from eligible patients referred to Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, United Kingdom, between January 1, 2017, and January 30, 2019, because of onset of disease early in life, family history, and/or complex neuroinflammatory phenotypes. The main outcome was the percentage of individuals with definitive molecular diagnoses, variant classification, and clinical phenotyping of patients with pathogenic variants identified using the NIP panel. The NIP panel was initially validated in 16 patients with known genetic diagnoses. The NIP was both sensitive (95%) and specific (100%) for detection of known mutations, including gene deletions, copy number variants, small insertions and deletions, and somatic mosaicism with allele fraction as low as 3%. Prospective testing of 60 patients (30 [50%] male; median [range] age, 9.8 [0.8-20] years) presenting with heterogeneous neuroinflammatory phenotypes revealed at least 1 class 5 (clearly pathogenic) variant in 9 of 60 patients (15%); 18 of 60 patients (30%) had at least 1 class 4 (likely pathogenic) variant. Overall, a definitive molecular diagnosis was established in 12 of 60 patients (20%). The NIP was associated with molecular diagnosis in this cohort and complemented routine laboratory and radiological workup of patients with neuroinflammation. Unexpected genotype-phenotype associations in patients with pathogenic variants deviating from the classic phenotype were identified. Obtaining an accurate molecular diagnosis in a timely fashion informed patient management, including successful targeted treatment in some instances and early institution of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in others.

Highlights

  • Neuroinflammatory diseases are increasingly recognized in the pediatric population and commonly present with a range of symptoms that include encephalopathy, seizures, and/or focal motor deficits.[1,2,3] A monogenic cause for some neuroinflammatory conditions may be suspected, if there is presentation early in life, consanguinity, and/or similar disease affecting other family members.[2,4] Despite this, availability of routine genetic testing for monogenic neuroinflammation remains limited and expensive

  • Prospective testing of 60 patients (30 [50%] male; median [range] age, 9.8 [0.8-20] years) presenting with heterogeneous neuroinflammatory phenotypes revealed at least 1 class 5 variant in 9 of 60 patients (15%); 18 of 60 patients (30%) had at least 1 class 4 variant

  • Unexpected genotype-phenotype associations in patients with pathogenic variants deviating from the classic phenotype were identified

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Neuroinflammatory diseases are increasingly recognized in the pediatric population and commonly present with a range of symptoms that include encephalopathy, seizures, and/or focal motor deficits.[1,2,3] A monogenic cause for some neuroinflammatory conditions may be suspected, if there is presentation early in life, consanguinity, and/or similar disease affecting other family members.[2,4] Despite this, availability of routine genetic testing for monogenic neuroinflammation remains limited and expensive. Because there is considerable genotypic and phenotypic overlap for these diseases, with neurometabolic and neurodegenerative disorders, there is often a diagnostic delay of several years, and some patients remain undiagnosed.[2] Patients accrue significant irreversible central nervous system injury and may even die in this prediagnostic phase.[2] Securing a definitive genetic diagnosis is important to enable timely therapeutic stratification of patients with monogenic neuroinflammation

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.