Abstract

PurposeWe investigated the diagnostic and clinical performance of exome sequencing (ES) in fetuses with sonographic abnormalities with normal karyotype, microarray and, in some cases, normal gene specific sequencing.MethodsES was performed from DNA of 15 anomalous fetuses and from peripheral blood from their parents. Parents provided consent for the return of diagnostic results in the fetus, medically actionable findings in the parents, and identification as carrier couple for significant autosomal recessive conditions. We assessed perceptions and understanding of ES with mixed-methods in 15 mother-father dyads.ResultsIn 7 (47%) of 15 fetuses, ES provided a diagnosis or possible diagnosis with identification of variants in the following genes: COL1A1, MUSK, KCTD1, RTTN, TMEM67, PIEZO1; and DYNC2H1. One additional case revealed a de novo nonsense mutation in a novel candidate gene (MAP4K4). The perceived likelihood that ES would explain the results (5.2/10) was higher than the approximately 30% diagnostic yield discussed in pre-test counseling.ConclusionsES has diagnostic utility in a highly select population of fetuses where a genetic diagnosis was highly suspected. Challenges related to genetics literacy, and variant interpretation must be addressed by highly tailored pre- and post-test genetic counseling.

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