Uniparental isodisomy as a cause of recessive Mendelian disease: a diagnostic pitfall with a quick and easy solution in medium/large NGS analyses

2018 
Complete uniparental isodisomy (iUPD)—the presence of two identical chromosomes in an individual that originate from only a single parental homolog—is an underestimated cause of recessive Mendelian disease in humans. Correctly identifying iUPD in an index patient is of enormous consequence to correctly counseling the family/couple, as the recurrence risk for siblings is reduced from 25% to usually 85% proportion of homozygous calls on a single chromosome with ≥30 sufficiently interspaced called variants results in a sensitivity of 97.9% and specificity of 99.7%. The PPV is 95.1%, the NPV 99.9%. When this threshold is exceeded for a chromosome on which a patient harbors an apparently homozygous disease-associated variant, it should be sufficient cause to discuss iUPD as a plausible or probable mechanism of disease in the genetic analysis report, even when parental segregation has not (yet) been performed.
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