2016
Not the End of the Odyssey: Parental Perceptions of Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) in Pediatric Undiagnosed Disorders
Rosell AM, Pena LD, Schoch K, Spillmann R, Sullivan J, Hooper SR, Jiang Y, Mathey‐Andrews N, Goldstein DB, Shashi V. Not the End of the Odyssey: Parental Perceptions of Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) in Pediatric Undiagnosed Disorders. Journal Of Genetic Counseling 2016, 25: 1019-1031. PMID: 26868367, DOI: 10.1007/s10897-016-9933-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWhole-exome sequencingLikely diagnosisParental perceptionsRetrospective semi-structured interviewsMedical careWES findingsExome sequencingParents of childrenNegative genetic testing resultsGenetic testing resultsChild's medical careRare genetic disorderClinical diagnostic categoriesParental expectationsSense of isolationParental motivationDefinite diagnosisPrimary diagnosisRare disorderSemi-structured interviewsEducational professionalsSpecific treatmentUndiagnosed disordersPossible diagnosisRecurrence risk
2014
A genomic copy number variant analysis implicates the MBD5 and HNRNPUgenes in Chinese children with infantile spasms and expands the clinical spectrum of 2q23.1 deletion
Du X, An Y, Yu L, Liu R, Qin Y, Guo X, Sun D, Zhou S, Wu B, Jiang YH, Wang Y. A genomic copy number variant analysis implicates the MBD5 and HNRNPUgenes in Chinese children with infantile spasms and expands the clinical spectrum of 2q23.1 deletion. BMC Medical Genomics 2014, 15: 62. PMID: 24885232, PMCID: PMC4061518, DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-15-62.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords1-Alkyl-2-acetylglycerophosphocholine EsteraseAge of OnsetBrainChild, PreschoolChromosome DeletionChromosomes, Human, Pair 1Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2DNA Copy Number VariationsDNA-Binding ProteinsFaciesFemaleFoot Deformities, CongenitalHand Deformities, CongenitalHeterogeneous-Nuclear RibonucleoproteinsHumansInfantInfant, NewbornMagnetic Resonance ImagingMaleMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsPhenotypeSpasms, InfantileConceptsInfantile spasmsEpileptic encephalopathyChinese childrenCNV lossDistinct clinical presentationsCopy number variantsPathogenicity of CNVsAutism spectrum disorderCausative genesMajority of casesWhole-exome sequencingRole of CNVsGeneralized seizuresClinical featuresClinical presentationClinical spectrumPrimary diagnosisSevere developmental disabilitiesSpasmConclusionOur findingsMBD5 geneReal-time qPCRExome sequencingGenetic factorsDifferent ethnic backgrounds