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Assessment of patient clinical descriptions and pathogenic variants from gene panel sequences in the CAGI-5 intellectual disability challenge.

Marco CarraroAlexander Miguel MonzonLuigi ChiricostaFrancesco ReggianiMaria Cristina AspromonteMariagrazia BelliniKymberleigh PagelYuxiang JiangPredrag RadivojacKunal KunduLipika R PalYizhou YinIvan LimongelliGaia AndreolettiJohn MoultStephen J WilsonPanagiostis KatsonisOlivier LichtargeJingqi ChenYaqiong WangZhiqiang HuSteven E BrennerCarlo FerrariAlessandra MurgiaSilvio C E TosattoEmanuela Leonardi
Published in: Human mutation (2019)
The Critical Assessment of Genome Interpretation-5 intellectual disability challenge asked to use computational methods to predict patient clinical phenotypes and the causal variant(s) based on an analysis of their gene panel sequence data. Sequence data for 74 genes associated with intellectual disability (ID) and/or autism spectrum disorders (ASD) from a cohort of 150 patients with a range of neurodevelopmental manifestations (i.e. ID, autism, epilepsy, microcephaly, macrocephaly, hypotonia, ataxia) have been made available for this challenge. For each patient, predictors had to report the causative variants and which of the seven phenotypes were present. Since neurodevelopmental disorders are characterized by strong comorbidity, tested individuals often present more than one pathological condition. Considering the overall clinical manifestation of each patient, the correct phenotype has been predicted by at least one group for 93 individuals (62%). ID and ASD were the best predicted among the seven phenotypic traits. Also, causative or potentially pathogenic variants were predicted correctly by at least one group. However, the prediction of the correct causative variant seems to be insufficient to predict the correct phenotype. In some cases, the correct prediction has been supported by rare or common variants in genes different from the causative one.
Keyphrases
  • intellectual disability
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • case report
  • attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
  • electronic health record
  • gene expression
  • early onset
  • zika virus
  • transcription factor