Combining globally search for a regular expression and print matching lines with bibliographic monitoring of genomic database improves diagnosis

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Tran Mau-Them, Frédéric | Overs, Alexis | Bruel, Ange-Line | Duquet, Romain | Thareau, Mylene | Denommé-Pichon, Anne-Sophie | Vitobello, Antonio | Sorlin, Arthur | Safraou, Hana | Nambot, Sophie | Delanne, Julian | Moutton, Sebastien | Racine, Caroline | Engel, Camille | de Giraud D’agay, Melchior | Lehalle, Daphne | Goldenberg, Alice | Willems, Marjolaine | Coubes, Christine | Genevieve, David | Verloes, Alain | Capri, Yline | Perrin, Laurence | Jacquemont, Marie-Line | Lambert, Laetitia | Lacaze, Elodie | Thevenon, Julien | Hana, Nadine | Van-Gils, Julien | Dubucs, Charlotte | Bizaoui, Varoona | Gerard-Blanluet, Marion | Lespinasse, James | Mercier, Sandra | Guerrot, Anne-Marie | Maystadt, Isabelle | Tisserant, Emilie | Faivre, Laurence | Philippe, Christophe | Duffourd, Yannis | Thauvin-Robinet, Christel

Edité par CCSD ; Frontiers Media -

International audience. Introduction: Exome sequencing has a diagnostic yield ranging from 25% to 70% in rare diseases and regularly implicates genes in novel disorders. Retrospective data reanalysis has demonstrated strong efficacy in improving diagnosis, but poses organizational difficulties for clinical laboratories. Patients and methods: We applied a reanalysis strategy based on intensive prospective bibliographic monitoring along with direct application of the GREP command-line tool (to “globally search for a regular expression and print matching lines”) in a large ES database. For 18 months, we submitted the same five keywords of interest [( intellectual disability , ( neuro ) developmental delay , and ( neuro ) developmental disorder )] to PubMed on a daily basis to identify recently published novel disease–gene associations or new phenotypes in genes already implicated in human pathology. We used the Linux GREP tool and an in-house script to collect all variants of these genes from our 5,459 exome database. Results: After GREP queries and variant filtration, we identified 128 genes of interest and collected 56 candidate variants from 53 individuals. We confirmed causal diagnosis for 19/128 genes (15%) in 21 individuals and identified variants of unknown significance for 19/128 genes (15%) in 23 individuals. Altogether, GREP queries for only 128 genes over a period of 18 months permitted a causal diagnosis to be established in 21/2875 undiagnosed affected probands (0.7%). Conclusion: The GREP query strategy is efficient and less tedious than complete periodic reanalysis. It is an interesting reanalysis strategy to improve diagnosis.

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