Evaluation of an automated genome interpretation model for rare disease routinely used in a clinical genetic laboratory

被引:11
|
作者
Meng, Linyan [1 ,2 ]
Attali, Ruben [3 ]
Talmy, Tomer [3 ,4 ]
Regev, Yakir [3 ]
Mizrahi, Niv [3 ]
Smirin-Yosef, Pola [3 ]
Vossaert, Liesbeth [1 ,2 ]
Taborda, Christian [2 ]
Santana, Michael [2 ]
Machol, Ido [1 ,2 ]
Xiao, Rui [1 ,2 ]
Dai, Hongzheng [1 ,2 ]
Eng, Christine [1 ,2 ]
Xia, Fan [1 ,2 ]
Tzur, Shay [3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Baylor Coll Med, Dept Mol & Human Genet, Houston, TX USA
[2] Baylor Genet, Houston, TX USA
[3] Emedgene Illumina Co, Genom Res Dept, Tel Aviv, Israel
[4] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Inst Res Mil Med, Fac Med, Hadassah Med Ctr, Jerusalem, Israel
[5] Emedgene Illumina Co, Yigal Alon 126, IL-6744332 Tel Aviv, Israel
关键词
Clinical genomics; Machine learning methods;
D O I
10.1016/j.gim.2023.100830
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Purpose: The analysis of exome and genome sequencing data for the diagnosis of rare diseases is challenging and time-consuming. In this study, we evaluated an artificial intelligence model, based on machine learning for automating variant prioritization for diagnosing rare genetic diseases in the Baylor Genetics clinical laboratory. Methods: The automated analysis model was developed using a supervised learning approach based on thousands of manually curated variants. The model was evaluated on 2 cohorts. The model accuracy was determined using a retrospective cohort comprising 180 randomly selected exome cases (57 singletons, 123 trios); all of which were previously diagnosed and solved through manual interpretation. Diagnostic yield with the modified workflow was estimated using a prospective "production" cohort of 334 consecutive clinical cases.Results: The model accurately pinpointed all manually reported variants as candidates. The reported variants were ranked in top 10 candidate variants in 98.4% (121/123) of trio cases, in 93.0% (53/57) of single proband cases, and 96.7% (174/180) of all cases. The accuracy of the model was reduced in some cases because of incomplete variant calling (eg, copy number variants) or incomplete phenotypic description.Conclusion: The automated model for case analysis assists clinical genetic laboratories in prioritizing candidate variants effectively. The use of such technology may facilitate the inter-pretation of genomic data for a large number of patients in the era of precision medicine.(c) 2023 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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页数:6
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