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Genetic testing in motor neuron disease and frontotemporal dementia: A 5-year multicentre evaluation

Genetic testing in motor neuron disease and frontotemporal dementia: A 5-year multicentre evaluation
Genetic testing in motor neuron disease and frontotemporal dementia: A 5-year multicentre evaluation

Introduction: Motor neuron disease (MND) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) comprise a neurodegenerative disease spectrum. Genetic testing and counselling is complex in MND/FTD owing to incomplete penetrance, variable phenotype and variants of uncertain significance. Affected patients and unaffected relatives are commonly referred to clinical genetics to consider genetic testing. However, no consensus exists regarding how such genetic testing should best be undertaken and on which patients. Objective: We sought to ascertain UK clinical genetics testing practice in MND/FTD referrals, with the aim of helping inform guideline development. Methods: MND/FTD clinical genetics referrals comprising both affected patients and unaffected relatives between 2012 and 2016 were identified and a standardised proforma used to collate data from clinical records. Results: 301 referrals (70 affected, 231 unaffected) were reviewed across 10 genetics centres. Previously identified familial variants were known in 107 cases and 58% subsequently underwent testing (8 of 8 diagnostic and 54 of 99 predictive). The median number of genetic counselling appointments was 2 for diagnostic and 4 for predictive testing. Importantly, application of current UK Genomic Test Directory eligibility criteria would not have resulted in detection of all pathogenic variants observed in this cohort. Conclusion: We propose pragmatic MND/FTD genetic testing guidelines based on appropriate genetic counselling.

dementia, genetic testing, motor neurone disease, neurodegenerative diseases
0022-2593
Cairns, Lauren
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Rankin, Julia
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Hamad, Asma
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Cooper, Nicola
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Merrifield, Katrina
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Jain, Vani
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Rosser, Elisabeth
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Rogers, Megan
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Buston, Sarah
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Stopford, Cheryl
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Jones, Gabriela
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Lefory, Henrietta
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Nemeth, Andrea
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Holden, Simon T.
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Douglas, Andrew
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Cairns, Lauren
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Rankin, Julia
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Hamad, Asma
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Cooper, Nicola
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Merrifield, Katrina
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Jain, Vani
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Rosser, Elisabeth
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Rogers, Megan
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Buston, Sarah
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Stopford, Cheryl
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Jones, Gabriela
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Lefory, Henrietta
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Nemeth, Andrea
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Holden, Simon T.
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Douglas, Andrew
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Cairns, Lauren, Rankin, Julia, Hamad, Asma, Cooper, Nicola, Merrifield, Katrina, Jain, Vani, Rosser, Elisabeth, Rogers, Megan, Buston, Sarah, Stopford, Cheryl, Jones, Gabriela, Lefory, Henrietta, Nemeth, Andrea, Holden, Simon T. and Douglas, Andrew (2021) Genetic testing in motor neuron disease and frontotemporal dementia: A 5-year multicentre evaluation. Journal of Medical Genetics. (doi:10.1136/jmedgenet-2021-107776).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Motor neuron disease (MND) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) comprise a neurodegenerative disease spectrum. Genetic testing and counselling is complex in MND/FTD owing to incomplete penetrance, variable phenotype and variants of uncertain significance. Affected patients and unaffected relatives are commonly referred to clinical genetics to consider genetic testing. However, no consensus exists regarding how such genetic testing should best be undertaken and on which patients. Objective: We sought to ascertain UK clinical genetics testing practice in MND/FTD referrals, with the aim of helping inform guideline development. Methods: MND/FTD clinical genetics referrals comprising both affected patients and unaffected relatives between 2012 and 2016 were identified and a standardised proforma used to collate data from clinical records. Results: 301 referrals (70 affected, 231 unaffected) were reviewed across 10 genetics centres. Previously identified familial variants were known in 107 cases and 58% subsequently underwent testing (8 of 8 diagnostic and 54 of 99 predictive). The median number of genetic counselling appointments was 2 for diagnostic and 4 for predictive testing. Importantly, application of current UK Genomic Test Directory eligibility criteria would not have resulted in detection of all pathogenic variants observed in this cohort. Conclusion: We propose pragmatic MND/FTD genetic testing guidelines based on appropriate genetic counselling.

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jmedgenet-2021-107776.R1_Proof_hi - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 May 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
Keywords: dementia, genetic testing, motor neurone disease, neurodegenerative diseases

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 448880
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448880
ISSN: 0022-2593
PURE UUID: a33deeef-2c34-4da1-8080-2e8d8c128294
ORCID for Andrew Douglas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5154-6714

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Date deposited: 07 May 2021 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:21

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Contributors

Author: Lauren Cairns
Author: Julia Rankin
Author: Asma Hamad
Author: Nicola Cooper
Author: Katrina Merrifield
Author: Vani Jain
Author: Elisabeth Rosser
Author: Megan Rogers
Author: Sarah Buston
Author: Cheryl Stopford
Author: Gabriela Jones
Author: Henrietta Lefory
Author: Andrea Nemeth
Author: Simon T. Holden
Author: Andrew Douglas ORCID iD

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