Notícia

SRMED (Alemanha)

Februar 17, 2024 Uncategorized Februar 17, 2024 1 View (1 notícias)

Publicado em 17 de fevereiro de 2024

In an arti­cle pub­lished in the Jour­nal of Pedi­atrics, researchers based in Brazil describe the case of a nine-year-old boy admit­ted to hos­pi­tal with mul­ti­ple symp­toms and over­lap­ping con­di­tions that made diag­no­sis dif­fi­cult, such as short stature, thin tooth enam­el (den­tal enam­el hypopla­sia), mod­er­ate men­tal defi­cien­cy, speech delay, asth­ma, mild­ly altered blood sug­ar, and a his­to­ry of recur­ring infec­tions in infancy.

The team used exome sequenc­ing, in which only the pro­tein-cod­ing por­tion of the genome is ana­lyzed, to look for genet­ic muta­tions, and found them in GCK and BCL11B. As a result, the diag­no­sis was mono­genic dia­betes and T‑cell abnor­mal­i­ty syn­drome, both of which are rare dis­eases. Iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of the exact cause of the prob­lem and the dis­cov­ery of a blood sug­ar alter­ation sig­nif­i­cant­ly influ­enced their choice of treatment.

This is one of six cas­es involv­ing syn­dromic growth dis­or­ders with mul­ti­ple genet­ic diag­noses (two or more dis­tinct genet­ic con­di­tions in the same patient) described in the arti­cle, which con­cerns a study con­duct­ed by researchers at the Uni­ver­si­ty of São Paulo’s Med­ical School (FM-USP) with FAPESP’s support.

Exome sequenc­ing is a very use­ful tech­nol­o­gy to reduce what we call the diag­nos­tic odyssey – the long jour­ney patients with rare or com­plex con­di­tions have to under­go until they receive a prop­er diag­no­sis. Ten years ago, pri­vate labs charged BRL 10,000. The price has now fall­en to BRL 4,000 [ about USD 800 ]. That’s still a lot of mon­ey for a test, but it has proved essen­tial to accu­rate diag­no­sis and treat­ment in cas­es of this kind.”

Alexan­der Augus­to de Lima Jorge, last author of the article

The team sequenced the exomes of 115 patients with syn­dromic growth dis­or­ders that had hith­er­to unknown caus­es, diag­nos­ing 63 on the basis of the genet­ic analy­sis; 9.5% of these had a mul­ti­ple diag­no­sis, far more than in pre­vi­ous studies.

“The cas­es involved two or more rare mono­genic con­di­tions in the same patient. Such cas­es are very hard to diag­nose, espe­cial­ly by clin­i­cal assess­ment alone. The study high­lights the need to use broad genet­ic tests such as whole exome or whole genome sequenc­ing for these patients as the only way to iden­ti­fy the rare dis­eases that explain such clus­ters of con­di­tions,” Lima Jorge said.

There are numer­ous rare dis­eases, includ­ing growth dis­or­ders, so it is nat­u­ral­ly dif­fi­cult to iden­ti­fy many of them, he added. Between 5% and 10% of the world pop­u­la­tion is believed to have a rare disease.

Short stature or tall stature is not a diag­no­sis but a clin­i­cal find­ing. “Short stature may have an exter­nal cause, such as an infec­tion or mal­nu­tri­tion. Even so, genet­ic fac­tors will always be impor­tant to growth. In healthy chil­dren with short or tall stature as the only man­i­fes­ta­tion, there will prob­a­bly be a poly­genic basis [ where stature is influ­enced by sev­er­al genet­ic vari­ants ], but in syn­dromic growth dis­or­ders, in which short or tall stature is accom­pa­nied by oth­er find­ings such as men­tal defi­cien­cy, deaf­ness, autism spec­trum dis­or­der or mal­for­ma­tion, an alter­ation in one or more genes is more like­ly as a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the com­plex phe­no­type involved,” Lima Jorge said.

In light of the results, the researchers advo­cate recog­ni­tion of mul­ti­ple genet­ic diag­noses as a pos­si­bil­i­ty in com­plex cas­es of growth dis­or­der, open­ing up nov­el prospects for treat­ment and genet­ic coun­sel­ing for such patients, in place of the typ­i­cal par­a­digm that calls for a sin­gle diag­no­sis to explain all findings.

In the arti­cle, the researchers state that the devel­op­ment of next-gen­er­a­tion sequenc­ing tech­niques such as whole exome or whole genome sequenc­ing has made select­ing a sin­gle gene as the can­di­date to explain a case unnec­es­sary. This par­tic­u­lar ben­e­fit has proved use­ful in the research envi­ron­ment to fos­ter the dis­cov­ery of nov­el dis­ease-asso­ci­at­ed genes, to fur­ther the study of con­di­tions with a high degree of genet­ic het­ero­gene­ity, and to help care for patients with com­plex syn­dromic con­di­tions, where diag­noses can­not be obtained by tra­di­tion­al clin­i­cal and genet­ic methods.

Sev­er­al chal­lenges not­ed by Lima Jorge include the high cost of genet­ic tests and the fact that exome sequenc­ing has a suc­cess rate of about 50% in the diag­no­sis of com­plex cas­es. In oth­er words, about half the patients sub­mit­ted to this kind of analy­sis will have to go on look­ing for a con­clu­sive diagnosis.