Good News for NICU Babies: Faster DNA Testing for More Accurate Diagnoses

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Fifty hours. Thats how long it now takes to decode and interpret a newborn babys genome an undertaking that used to take weeks, or even months. And those two days can mean the difference between life and death for a critically ill infant.

In a paper published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, researchers led by Stephen Kingsmore, director of the Center for Pediatric Genomic Medicine at Childrens Mercy Hospital, describe a new genetic test that can rapidly screen the DNA of babies in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) for about 3,500 diseases known to be linked to single-gene mutations. Of these, doctors can treat about 500.

Up to a third of babies admitted to the NICU have a genetic disease. But many newborns are not diagnosed properly and may therefore miss the opportunity for a potentially life-saving therapy. Many of the symptoms of such genetic diseases are both general and shared by many different conditions, which makes them difficult to diagnose; whats more, many of the genetic conditions in question are rare, so most physicians, even NICU specialists, may not be familiar them or unable to recognize their symptoms. Currently used genetic tests are also too expensive and time-consuming to be clinically useful; because the tests can take weeks, or sometimes months, most NICU babies will have either gone home or died by the time the results are ready.

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So Kingsmore and his colleagues collaborated with Illumina, a manufacturer of gene-sequencing machines, to shorten the time it takes to both decode an entire genome and generate a clinically useful analysis of that sequencing. Thanks to recent advances in the ability to break up and re-knit DNA, the company was able to sequence the 3 billion base pairs of the genome in just 27 hours down from weeks.

But decoding a genome is only half of the challenge. Words in a book dont make sense unless they are put together in a grammatically sensible way, and similarly, DNA is meaningless unless its analyzed in the context of genes, which in turn are connected to human functions or conditions. So for two years, Kingsmores team worked on special software designed to help doctors use genetic information to make accurate diagnoses and guide ill babies to the right treatment.

The software simplifies and standardizes the often complex process of diagnosis, by allowing doctors to click on the symptoms they see in newborns; the program then puts together a list of the genes that might be most likely to be at fault. Doctors can then compare these genetic suspects to the newborns sequenced genome to see if any of the same genes are mutated; if they are, they can pinpoint a diagnosis.

(MORE: Decoding Cancer: Scientists Release 520 Tumor Genomes from Pediatric Patients)

There is a phenomenal need for more accurate and faster diagnosis in the NICU, says Kingsmore, adding that this is a setting where we know that giving treatments is one of the most effective things we can do in medicine from the cost standpoint, since these patients have 65 to 70 years of life to live out.

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Good News for NICU Babies: Faster DNA Testing for More Accurate Diagnoses

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