Abstract
Neuromuscular diseases are genetically highly heterogeneous, and differential diagnosis can be challenging. Over a 3-year period, we prospectively analyzed 268 pediatric and adult patients with a suspected diagnosis of inherited neuromuscular disorder (INMD) using comprehensive gene-panel analysis and next-generation sequencing. The rate of diagnosis increased exponentially with the addition of genes to successive versions of the INMD panel, from 31% for the first iteration (278 genes) to 40% for the last (324 genes). The global mean diagnostic rate was 36% (97/268 patients), with a diagnostic turnaround time of 4–6 weeks. Most diagnoses corresponded to muscular dystrophies/myopathies (68.37%) and peripheral nerve diseases (22.45%). The most common causative genes, TTN, RYR1, and ANO5, accounted for almost 30% of the diagnosed cases. Finally, we evaluated the utility of the differential diagnosis tool Phenomizer, which established a correlation between the phenotype and molecular findings in 21% of the diagnosed patients. In summary, comprehensive gene-panel analysis of all genes implicated in neuromuscular diseases facilitates a rapid diagnosis and provides a high diagnostic yield.
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Barbosa-Gouveia, S., Vázquez-Mosquera, M. E., González-Vioque, E., Hermida-Ameijeiras, Á., Sánchez-Pintos, P., de Castro, M. J., … Couce, M. L. (2022). Rapid Molecular Diagnosis of Genetically Inherited Neuromuscular Disorders Using Next-Generation Sequencing Technologies. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11102750
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