O'Grady GL, Lek M, Lamande SR, Waddell L, Oates EC, Punetha
J, Ghaoui R,
Sandaradura SA, Best H, Kaur S, Davis M, Laing NG, Muntoni
F, Hoffman E,
MacArthur DG, Clarke NF, Cooper S, North K. Diagnosis and
etiology of congenital
muscular dystrophy: We are halfway there. Ann Neurol. 2016
Jul;80(1):101-11.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the diagnostic outcomes in a large cohort of
congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) patients using traditional and next
generation sequencing (NGS) technologies.
METHODS:
A total of 123 CMD patients were investigated using the
traditional approaches of histology, immunohistochemical analysis of muscle
biopsy, and candidate gene sequencing. Undiagnosed patients available for
further testing were investigated using NGS.
RESULTS:
Muscle biopsy and immunohistochemical analysis found
deficiencies of laminin α2, α-dystroglycan, or collagen VI in 50% of patients.
Candidate gene sequencing and chromosomal microarray established a genetic
diagnosis in 32% (39 of 123). Of 85 patients presenting in the past 20 years,
28 of 51 who lacked a confirmed genetic diagnosis (55%) consented to NGS
studies, leading to confirmed diagnoses in a further 11 patients. Using the
combination of approaches, a confirmed genetic diagnosis was achieved in 51%
(43 of 85). The diagnoses within the cohort were heterogeneous. Forty-five of
59 probands with confirmed or probable diagnoses had variants in genes known to
cause CMD (76%), and 11 of 59 (19%) had variants in genes associated with
congenital myopathies, reflecting overlapping features of these conditions. One
patient had a congenital myasthenic syndrome, and 2 had microdeletions. Within
the cohort, 5 patients had variants in novel (PIGY and GMPPB) or recently
published genes (GFPT1 and MICU1), and 7 had variants in TTN or RYR1, large
genes that are technically difficult to Sanger sequence.
INTERPRETATION:
These data support NGS as a first-line tool for genetic
evaluation of patients with a clinical phenotype suggestive of CMD, with muscle
biopsy reserved as a second-tier investigation.
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