Objective: To evaluate the performance of a diagnostic protocol for neonatal/infantile cholestasis in which the main clinical patterns steered the early use of different genetic testing strategies. Study design: An observational study was conducted between 2012 and 2017 in a tertiary care setting on a prospective cohort of children with cholestasis occurring at ≤1 year of age and persisting ≥6 weeks, to measure the detection rate of underlying monogenic diseases. After the exclusion of biliary atresia, a clinically driven genetic testing was performed, entailing 3 different approaches with different wideness: confirmatory single-gene testing; focused virtual panels; and wide search through trio whole-exome sequencing. Results: We enrolled 125 children (66 female, median age 2 months); 96 (77%) patients had hypocholic stools and were evaluated rapidly to exclude biliary atresia, which was the final diagnosis in 74 (59%). Overall, 50 patients underwent genetic testing, 6 with single confirmatory gene testing, 38 through panels, and 6 with trio whole-exome sequencing because of complex phenotype. The genetic testing detection rate was 60%: the final diagnosis was Alagille syndrome in 11, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 2 in 6, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency in 3, and progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 in 2; a further 7 genetic conditions were identified in 1 child each. Overall, only 18 of 125 (14%) remained with an indeterminate etiology. Conclusions: This protocol combining clinical and genetic assessment proved to be an effective diagnostic tool for neonatal/infantile cholestasis, identifying inherited disorders with a high detection rate. It also could allow a noninvasive diagnosis in children presenting with colored stools.

Nicastro, E., Di Giorgio, A., Marchetti, D., Barboni, C., Cereda, A., Iascone, M., et al. (2019). Diagnostic Yield of an Algorithm for Neonatal and Infantile Cholestasis Integrating Next-Generation Sequencing. THE JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 211, 54-62 [10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.04.016].

Diagnostic Yield of an Algorithm for Neonatal and Infantile Cholestasis Integrating Next-Generation Sequencing

D'Antiga L.
2019

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the performance of a diagnostic protocol for neonatal/infantile cholestasis in which the main clinical patterns steered the early use of different genetic testing strategies. Study design: An observational study was conducted between 2012 and 2017 in a tertiary care setting on a prospective cohort of children with cholestasis occurring at ≤1 year of age and persisting ≥6 weeks, to measure the detection rate of underlying monogenic diseases. After the exclusion of biliary atresia, a clinically driven genetic testing was performed, entailing 3 different approaches with different wideness: confirmatory single-gene testing; focused virtual panels; and wide search through trio whole-exome sequencing. Results: We enrolled 125 children (66 female, median age 2 months); 96 (77%) patients had hypocholic stools and were evaluated rapidly to exclude biliary atresia, which was the final diagnosis in 74 (59%). Overall, 50 patients underwent genetic testing, 6 with single confirmatory gene testing, 38 through panels, and 6 with trio whole-exome sequencing because of complex phenotype. The genetic testing detection rate was 60%: the final diagnosis was Alagille syndrome in 11, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 2 in 6, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency in 3, and progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 in 2; a further 7 genetic conditions were identified in 1 child each. Overall, only 18 of 125 (14%) remained with an indeterminate etiology. Conclusions: This protocol combining clinical and genetic assessment proved to be an effective diagnostic tool for neonatal/infantile cholestasis, identifying inherited disorders with a high detection rate. It also could allow a noninvasive diagnosis in children presenting with colored stools.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Alagille syndrome; biliary atresia; diagnosis; etiology; familial cholestasis; genetic testing; infantile cholestasis; monogenic liver disease; neonatal cholestasis; next-generation sequencing;
English
2019
211
54
62
e4
none
Nicastro, E., Di Giorgio, A., Marchetti, D., Barboni, C., Cereda, A., Iascone, M., et al. (2019). Diagnostic Yield of an Algorithm for Neonatal and Infantile Cholestasis Integrating Next-Generation Sequencing. THE JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 211, 54-62 [10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.04.016].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/479659
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