Abstract

BackgroundAs clinical exome sequencing (CES) becomes more common, understanding which patients are most likely to benefit and in what manner is critical for the general pediatrics community to appreciate.Methods523 patients referred to the Pediatric Genetics clinic at Michigan Medicine were systematically phenotyped by presence or absence of abnormalities for 13 body/organ systems by a Clinical Genetics team. All patients then underwent CES.ResultsOverall, 30% of patients who underwent CES had an identified pathogenic mutation. The most common phenotypes were developmental delay (83%), neuromuscular system abnormalities (81%), and multiple congenital anomalies (42%). 67% of patients had a variant of uncertain significance (VUS) or gene of uncertain significance (GUS); 23% had no variants reported. There was a significant difference in the average number of body systems affected amongst these groups (pathogenic 5.89, VUS 6.0, GUS 6.12, and no variant 4.6; P<0.00001). Representative cases highlight four ways in which CES is changing clinical pediatric practice.ConclusionsPatients with identified variants are enriched for multiple organ system involvement. Furthermore, our phenotyping provides broad insights into which patients are most likely to benefit from genetics referral and CES, and how those results can help guide clinical practice more generally.

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