Diagnostic yield of whole exome sequencing in pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy

PA Long, JM Evans, TM Olson - Journal of Cardiovascular Development …, 2017 - mdpi.com
PA Long, JM Evans, TM Olson
Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease, 2017mdpi.com
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a heritable, genetically heterogeneous disorder
characterized by progressive heart failure. DCM typically remains clinically silent until
adulthood, yet symptomatic disease can develop in childhood. We sought to identify the
genetic basis of pediatric DCM in 15 sporadic and three affected-siblings cases, comprised
of 21 affected children (mean age, five years) whose parents had normal echocardiograms
(mean age, 39 years). Twelve underwent cardiac transplantation and five died with severe …
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a heritable, genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by progressive heart failure. DCM typically remains clinically silent until adulthood, yet symptomatic disease can develop in childhood. We sought to identify the genetic basis of pediatric DCM in 15 sporadic and three affected-siblings cases, comprised of 21 affected children (mean age, five years) whose parents had normal echocardiograms (mean age, 39 years). Twelve underwent cardiac transplantation and five died with severe heart failure. Parent-offspring whole exome sequencing (WES) data were filtered for rare, deleterious, de novo and recessive variants. In prior work, we reported de novo mutations in TNNT2 and RRAGC and compound heterozygous mutations in ALMS1 and TAF1A among four cases in our cohort. Here, de novo mutations in established DCM genes—RBM20, LMNA, TNNT2, and PRDM16—were identified among five additional cases. The RBM20 mutation was previously reported in familial DCM. An identical unreported LMNA mutation was identified in two unrelated cases, both harboring gene-specific defects in cardiomyocyte nuclear morphology. Collectively, WES had a 50% diagnostic yield in our cohort, providing an explanation for pediatric heart failure and enabling informed family planning. Research is ongoing to discover novel DCM genes among the remaining families.
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