AUTHOR=Demos Michelle , Guella Ilaria , DeGuzman Conrado , McKenzie Marna B. , Buerki Sarah E. , Evans Daniel M. , Toyota Eric B. , Boelman Cyrus , Huh Linda L. , Datta Anita , Michoulas Aspasia , Selby Kathryn , Bjornson Bruce H. , Horvath Gabriella , Lopez-Rangel Elena , van Karnebeek Clara D. M. , Salvarinova Ramona , Slade Erin , Eydoux Patrice , Adam Shelin , Van Allen Margot I. , Nelson Tanya N. , Bolbocean Corneliu , Connolly Mary B. , Farrer Matthew J. TITLE=Diagnostic Yield and Treatment Impact of Targeted Exome Sequencing in Early-Onset Epilepsy JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neurology VOLUME=10 YEAR=2019 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neurology/articles/10.3389/fneur.2019.00434 DOI=10.3389/fneur.2019.00434 ISSN=1664-2295 ABSTRACT=

Targeted whole-exome sequencing (WES) is a powerful diagnostic tool for a broad spectrum of heterogeneous neurological disorders. Here, we aim to examine the impact on diagnosis, treatment and cost with early use of targeted WES in early-onset epilepsy. WES was performed on 180 patients with early-onset epilepsy (≤5 years) of unknown cause. Patients were classified as Retrospective (epilepsy diagnosis >6 months) or Prospective (epilepsy diagnosis <6 months). WES was performed on an Ion Proton™ and variant reporting was restricted to the sequences of 620 known epilepsy genes. Diagnostic yield and time to diagnosis were calculated. An analysis of cost and impact on treatment was also performed. A molecular diagnoses (pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants) was achieved in 59/180 patients (33%). Clinical management changed following WES findings in 23 of 59 diagnosed patients (39%) or 13% of all patients. A possible diagnosis was identified in 21 additional patients (12%) for whom supporting evidence is pending. Time from epilepsy onset to a genetic diagnosis was faster when WES was performed early in the diagnostic process (mean: 145 days Prospective vs. 2,882 days Retrospective). Costs of prior negative tests averaged $8,344 per patient in the Retrospective group, suggesting savings of $5,110 per patient using WES. These results highlight the diagnostic yield, clinical utility and potential cost-effectiveness of using targeted WES early in the diagnostic workup of patients with unexplained early-onset epilepsy. The costs and clinical benefits are likely to continue to improve. Advances in precision medicine and further studies regarding impact on long-term clinical outcome will be important.