Publications
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis SocietyMay 2024 DOI:
10.1016/j.jcf.2024.04.018

The clinical utility of sequencing the entirety of CFTR

Sheridan, Molly B; Aksit, Melis A; Pagel, Kymberleigh; Hetrick, Kurt; Shultz-Lutwyche, Hannah; Myers, Ben; Buckingham, Kati J; Pace, Rhonda G; Ling, Hua; Pugh, Elizabeth; O'Neal, Wanda K; Bamshad, Michael J; Gibson, Ronald L; Knowles, Michael R; Blackman, Scott M; Cutting, Garry R; Raraigh, Karen S
Product Used
Variant Libraries
Abstract
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is caused by deleterious variants in each CFTR gene. We investigated the utility of whole-gene CFTR sequencing when fewer than two pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants were detected by conventional testing (sequencing of exons and flanking introns) of CFTR.Individuals with features of CF and a CF-diagnostic sweat chloride concentration with zero or one P/LP variants identified by conventional testing enrolled in the CF Mutation Analysis Program (MAP) underwent whole-gene CFTR sequencing. Replication was performed on individuals enrolled in the CF Genome Project (CFGP), followed by phenotype review and interrogation of other genes.Whole-gene sequencing identified a second P/LP variant in 20/43 MAP enrollees (47 %) and 10/22 CFGP enrollees (45 %) who had one P/LP variant after conventional testing. No P/LP variants were detected when conventional testing was negative (MAP: n = 43; CFGP: n = 13). Genome-wide analysis was unable to find an alternative etiology in CFGP participants with fewer than two P/LP CFTR variants and CF could not be confirmed in 91 % following phenotype re-review.Whole-gene CFTR analysis is beneficial in individuals with one previously-identified P/LP variant and a CF-diagnostic sweat chloride. Negative conventional CFTR testing indicates that the phenotype should be re-evaluated.
Product Used
Variant Libraries

Related Publications