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University of Washington shared the latest research from the SeqFirst-Neo study at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics.
November 20, 2024 • 3 min read
In a recent study, when the families of all babies in a NICU whose symptoms weren’t explained by isolated medical complications were offered rapid genome sequencing, a genetic diagnosis was found for 49% of babies who received the testing.
One of the big things the SeqFirst-Neo study seeks to understand is whether access to a genetic diagnosis is inequitable because of complex criteria around who qualifies for testing. Authors hypothesized that by broadening eligibility criteria, more babies will receive testing and, as a result, more babies will receive a diagnosis that impacts their care.
Babies admitted to the NICU at Seattle Children’s Hospital with clinical findings that were not fully explained by prematurity, infection, or trauma were offered rapid genome sequencing:
Prior to genome sequencing, the infants’ symptoms were attributed to isolated birth defects, prematurity, complications from surgery, infection, a non-genetic medical problem, or trauma.
Currently, most hospitals use inclusion criteria to determine which infants need genome sequencing. The study demonstrates that determining which babies to test with genome sequencing by using exclusion criteria—testing all babies whose symptoms aren’t explained by prematurity, trauma, infection, prenatal diagnosis or other isolated medical complications—is more likely to lead to a diagnosis and avoid a lengthy diagnostic odyssey. This prioritizing of eligibility (rather than ineligibility) could also improve safety and increase equality.
Critically ill babies in the NICU typically present with a combination of symptoms and challenges that make it difficult for any physician to ascertain the root cause.
Moving to exclusion criteria for genomic sequencing could empower doctors to help more families find answers—and the right treatments—sooner.
Learn more about GeneDx rapid genome sequencing here.
Reference: 1. Marwaha S, Knowles JW, and Ashley EA. Genome Med. 2022 Feb 28;14(1):23. doi: 10.1186/s13073-022-01026-w.