A visual and curatorial approach to clinical variant prioritization and disease gene discovery in genome-wide diagnostics.

TitleA visual and curatorial approach to clinical variant prioritization and disease gene discovery in genome-wide diagnostics.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsJames, RA, Campbell, IM, Chen, ES, Boone, PM, Rao, MA, Bainbridge, MN, Lupski, JR, Yang, Y, Eng, CM, Posey, JE, Shaw, CA
JournalGenome Med
Volume8
Issue1
Pagination13
Date Published2016 Feb 02
ISSN1756-994X
KeywordsComputational Biology, Diagnosis, Differential, Disease, Genetic Variation, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Phenotype, Pilot Projects, Retrospective Studies, Software
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Genome-wide data are increasingly important in the clinical evaluation of human disease. However, the large number of variants observed in individual patients challenges the efficiency and accuracy of diagnostic review. Recent work has shown that systematic integration of clinical phenotype data with genotype information can improve diagnostic workflows and prioritization of filtered rare variants. We have developed visually interactive, analytically transparent analysis software that leverages existing disease catalogs, such as the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database (OMIM) and the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO), to integrate patient phenotype and variant data into ranked diagnostic alternatives.

METHODS: Our tool, "OMIM Explorer" ( http://www.omimexplorer.com ), extends the biomedical application of semantic similarity methods beyond those reported in previous studies. The tool also provides a simple interface for translating free-text clinical notes into HPO terms, enabling clinical providers and geneticists to contribute phenotypes to the diagnostic process. The visual approach uses semantic similarity with multidimensional scaling to collapse high-dimensional phenotype and genotype data from an individual into a graphical format that contextualizes the patient within a low-dimensional disease map. The map proposes a differential diagnosis and algorithmically suggests potential alternatives for phenotype queries--in essence, generating a computationally assisted differential diagnosis informed by the individual's personal genome. Visual interactivity allows the user to filter and update variant rankings by interacting with intermediate results. The tool also implements an adaptive approach for disease gene discovery based on patient phenotypes.

RESULTS: We retrospectively analyzed pilot cohort data from the Baylor Miraca Genetics Laboratory, demonstrating performance of the tool and workflow in the re-analysis of clinical exomes. Our tool assigned to clinically reported variants a median rank of 2, placing causal variants in the top 1 % of filtered candidates across the 47 cohort cases with reported molecular diagnoses of exome variants in OMIM Morbidmap genes. Our tool outperformed Phen-Gen, eXtasy, PhenIX, PHIVE, and hiPHIVE in the prioritization of these clinically reported variants.

CONCLUSIONS: Our integrative paradigm can improve efficiency and, potentially, the quality of genomic medicine by more effectively utilizing available phenotype information, catalog data, and genomic knowledge.

DOI10.1186/s13073-016-0261-8
Alternate JournalGenome Med
PubMed ID26838676
PubMed Central IDPMC4736244
Grant ListU54 HG006542 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM007526 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM07526 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
F31 NS083159 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM007330 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States