Unexpected genotypes associated with severe paediatric conditions identified in a healthy population cohort.

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Abstract

The expansion of genomics provides opportunity to screen individuals beyond clinical indication yet the classification of genomic variants and implications for health outcomes in this context is still emerging. We investigated this further by analysing clinically relevant variants and expected clinical implications in a population with no reported medical conditions. Whole genomes from 9637healthy unrelated research-consented participants in Singapore were analysed focusing on 1619 genes associated with severe paediatric disease. Association between causative variants and expected phenotype was assessed in correlation with participant characteristics and medical history where available. After considering protein impact, mode of inheritance and participant demographics for 110 unique variants, further analysis was performed for 44 variants occurring in 150 participants to understand clinical implications. Most carried variants associated with a mild phenotype (cystinuria), late onset (Fabry disease) or a potentially missed phenotype (Hajdu-Cheney syndrome). However, nine participants had variants associated with severe paediatric disease predicted to be symptomatic, such as limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and spastic paraplegia.Despite a cohort selected for absence of pre-existing health conditions, individuals were identified carrying variants associated with severe paediatric conditions. Further work is required to examine for subtle clinical symptoms. This study revealed the challenge of predicting clinical outcomes from genotype-derived screening and emphasises the importance of expanding phenotype characterisation which is highly relevant in population and reproductive screening settings. Trial registration: NCT02791152

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