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Genomics-informed neuropsychiatric care for neurodevelopmental disorders: Results from a multidisciplinary clinic

Published Web Location

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gim.2024.101333
No data is associated with this publication.
Creative Commons 'BY' version 4.0 license
Abstract

Purpose

Patients with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) have high rates of neuropsychiatric comorbidities. Genomic medicine may help guide care because pathogenic variants are identified in up to 50% of patients with NDDs. We evaluate the impact of a genomics-informed, multidisciplinary, neuropsychiatric specialty clinic on the diagnosis and management of patients with NDDs.

Methods

We performed a retrospective study of 316 patients from the University of California, Los Angeles Care and Research in Neurogenetics Clinic, a genomics-informed multidisciplinary clinic.

Results

Among the 246 patients who underwent genetic testing, 41.8% had a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant. Patients had 62 different genetic diagnoses, with 12 diagnoses shared by 2 or more patients, whereas 50 diagnoses were found in only single patients. Genetic diagnosis resulted in direct changes to clinical management in all patients with a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant, including cascade testing (30.6%), family counseling (22.2%), medication changes (13.9%), clinical trial referral (2.8%), medical surveillance (30.6%), and specialty referrals (69.4%).

Conclusions

A genomics-informed model can provide significant clinical benefits to patients with NDDs, directly affecting management across multiple domains for most diagnosed patients. As precision treatments advance, establishing a genetic diagnosis will be critical for proper management. With the growing number of rare neurogenetic disorders, clinician training should emphasize core principles of genomic medicine over individual syndromes.

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