Department of Biomedicine, Institute of Biomedicine and Translational Medicine, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.
Division of Genetics, Oregon National Primate Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University, Beaverton, OR, USA.
Hum Reprod. 2022 Jun 30;37(7):1652-1663. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deac100.
What is the load, distribution and added clinical value of secondary findings (SFs) identified in exome sequencing (ES) of patients with non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA)?
One in 28 NOA cases carried an identifiable, medically actionable SF.
In addition to molecular diagnostics, ES allows assessment of clinically actionable disease-related gene variants that are not connected to the patient's primary diagnosis, but the knowledge of which may allow the prevention, delay or amelioration of late-onset monogenic conditions. Data on SFs in specific clinical patient groups, including reproductive failure, are currently limited.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: The study group was a retrospective cohort of patients with NOA recruited in 10 clinics across six countries and formed in the framework of the international GEMINI (The GEnetics of Male INfertility Initiative) study.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: ES data of 836 patients with NOA were exploited to analyze SFs in 85 genes recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG), Geisinger's MyCode, and Clinical Genome Resource. The identified 6374 exonic variants were annotated with ANNOVAR and filtered for allele frequency, retaining 1381 rare or novel missense and loss-of-function variants. After automatic assessment of pathogenicity with ClinVar and InterVar, 87 variants were manually curated. The final list of confident disease-causing SFs was communicated to the corresponding GEMINI centers. When patient consent had been given, available family health history and non-andrological medical data were retrospectively assessed.
We found a 3.6% total frequency of SFs, 3.3% from the 59 ACMG SF v2.0 genes. One in 70 patients carried SFs in genes linked to familial cancer syndromes, whereas 1 in 60 cases was predisposed to congenital heart disease or other cardiovascular conditions. Retrospective assessment confirmed clinico-molecular diagnoses in several cases. Notably, 37% (11/30) of patients with SFs carried variants in genes linked to male infertility in mice, suggesting that some SFs may have a co-contributing role in spermatogenic impairment. Further studies are needed to determine whether these observations represent chance findings or the profile of SFs in NOA patients is indeed different from the general population.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: One limitation of our cohort was the low proportion of non-Caucasian ethnicities (9%). Additionally, as comprehensive clinical data were not available retrospectively for all men with SFs, we were not able to confirm a clinico-molecular diagnosis and assess the penetrance of the specific variants.
For the first time, this study analyzed medically actionable SFs in men with spermatogenic failure. With the evolving process to incorporate ES into routine andrology practice for molecular diagnostic purposes, additional assessment of SFs can inform about future significant health concerns for infertility patients. Timely detection of SFs and respective genetic counseling will broaden options for disease prevention and early treatment, as well as inform choices and opportunities regarding family planning. A notable fraction of SFs was detected in genes implicated in maintaining genome integrity, essential in both mitosis and meiosis. Thus, potential genetic pleiotropy may exist between certain adult-onset monogenic diseases and NOA.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This work was supported by the Estonian Research Council grants IUT34-12 and PRG1021 (M.L. and M.P.); National Institutes of Health of the United States of America grant R01HD078641 (D.F.C., K.I.A. and P.N.S.); National Institutes of Health of the United States of America grant P50HD096723 (D.F.C. and P.N.S.); National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia grant APP1120356 (M.K.O'B., D.F.C. and K.I.A.); Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT)/Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação grant POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007274 (A.M.L., F.C. and J.G.) and FCT: IF/01262/2014 (A.M.L.). J.G. was partially funded by FCT/Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Ensino Superior (MCTES), through the Centre for Toxicogenomics and Human Health-ToxOmics (grants UID/BIM/00009/2016 and UIDB/00009/2020). M.L.E. is a consultant for, and holds stock in, Roman, Sandstone, Dadi, Hannah, Underdog and has received funding from NIH/NICHD. Co-authors L.K., K.L., L.N., K.I.A., P.N.S., J.G., F.C., D.M.-M., K.A., K.A.J., M.K.O'B., A.M.L., D.F.C., M.P. and M.L. declare no conflict of interest.
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在非梗阻性无精子症(NOA)患者的外显子组测序(ES)中识别的次要发现(SFs)的负荷、分布和附加临床价值是什么?
28 例 NOA 病例中有 1 例携带可识别的、可采取医疗措施的 SF。
除了分子诊断外,ES 还允许评估与患者的主要诊断无关的临床可操作的疾病相关基因变异,但了解这些变异可能会预防、延迟或改善迟发性单基因疾病。目前,关于特定临床患者群体(包括生殖失败)的 SF 数据有限。
研究设计、大小和持续时间:该研究组是一个回顾性队列,由来自六个国家的 10 个诊所招募的 NOA 患者组成,该队列是国际 GEMINI(男性不育遗传学倡议)研究的一部分。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:利用 ES 数据分析了 85 个基因中的 SFs,这些基因由美国医学遗传学与基因组学学院(ACMG)、Geisinger 的 MyCode 和临床基因组资源推荐,其中包括与男性不育相关的 59 个 ACMG SF v2.0 基因。分析了 836 例 NOA 患者的 6374 个外显子变异体,用 ANNOVAR 对其进行注释,并根据等位基因频率进行过滤,保留了 1381 个罕见或新的错义及功能丧失变异体。在 ClinVar 和 InterVar 中自动评估致病性后,对 87 个变异体进行了手动编辑。最终确定了一组有信心的致病 SFs,并将其传达给相应的 GEMINI 中心。当获得患者同意时,回顾性评估了可用的家族健康史和非男科医疗数据。
我们发现 SFs 的总频率为 3.6%,其中 59 个 ACMG SF v2.0 基因中有 3.3%。每 70 例患者中有 1 例携带与家族性癌症综合征相关的 SFs,而每 60 例患者中有 1 例易患先天性心脏病或其他心血管疾病。在几个病例中,回顾性评估证实了临床分子诊断。值得注意的是,37%(11/30)携带 SFs 的患者的基因与小鼠的男性不育有关,这表明一些 SFs 可能在生精受损中具有共同作用。需要进一步研究来确定这些观察结果是偶然发现还是 NOA 患者的 SFs 确实与一般人群不同。
局限性、谨慎的原因:我们队列的一个局限性是低比例的非白种人(9%)。此外,由于无法回顾性获得所有携带 SFs 的男性的全面临床数据,我们无法确认临床分子诊断,并评估特定变异体的外显率。
这是首次对生殖失败的男性进行可采取医疗措施的 SFs 分析。随着将 ES 纳入常规男科实践进行分子诊断的进程不断发展,对 SFs 的进一步评估可以为不育患者未来的重要健康问题提供信息。及时发现 SFs 及其遗传咨询将拓宽疾病预防和早期治疗的选择,以及为家庭计划提供选择和机会。在维持基因组完整性的基因中检测到了相当一部分的 SFs,这在有丝分裂和减数分裂中都是必不可少的。因此,某些成年发病的单基因疾病和 NOA 之间可能存在潜在的遗传多效性。
研究资金/利益冲突:这项工作得到了爱沙尼亚研究理事会资助 IUT34-12 和 PRG1021(M.L.和 M.P.);美国国立卫生研究院资助 R01HD078641(D.F.C.、K.I.A.和 P.N.S.);美国国立卫生研究院资助 P50HD096723(D.F.C.和 P.N.S.);澳大利亚国家健康与医学研究理事会资助 APP1120356(M.K.O'B.、D.F.C.和 K.I.A.);FCT/葡萄牙科学技术基金会资助 POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007274(A.M.L.、F.C.和 J.G.)和 FCT:IF/01262/2014(A.M.L.)。J.G. 部分由 FCT/葡萄牙科学技术部(MCTES)资助,通过毒理学与人类健康中心-ToxOmics(拨款 UID/BIM/00009/2016 和 UIDB/00009/2020)资助。M.L.E. 是 Roman、Sandstone、Dadi、Hannah、Underdog 的顾问,并持有股份,并从 NIH/NICHD 获得资金。共同作者 L.K.、K.L.、L.N.、K.I.A.、P.N.S.、J.G.、F.C.、D.M.-M.、K.A.、K.A.J.、M.K.O'B.、A.M.L.、D.F.C.、M.P. 和 M.L. 均声明无利益冲突。
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