MedPath

Transcriptomic Analysis to Put an End to Misdiagnosis in Patients With Rare Muscle Diseases

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Rare Genetic Muscle Diseases
Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne
Muscular Dystrophy, Becker
Congenital Myopathy
Pompe Disease (Infantile-Onset)
Registration Number
NCT06833489
Lead Sponsor
Assistance Publique Hopitaux De Marseille
Brief Summary

Since 2017, more than 250 analyses performed at the Molecular Genetics Laboratory of the Timone Enfant Hospital have yielded negative results in patients with rare genetic muscle diseases. The researchers hypothesise that some of these misdiagnosed patients carry pathogenic RNA (transcript) disrupting variants that were not identified by DNA sequencing. In fact, DNA sequencing analyses can be negative despite the presence of a pathogenic variant that disrupts RNA splicing or expression, causing a genetic disease. For this reason, RNA sequencing can provide a diagnosis in patients who have not been diagnosed by DNA sequencing, thus putting an end to diagnostic wandering. Thus, as a descriptive prevalence study, the objectives are first to determine the rate of positive diagnoses made by the RNAseq approach in patients with muscle diseases that have not yet been diagnosed, and then to identify the genomic characteristics of the pathogenic variants identified in patients by RNAseq analysis, in order to facilitate the identification of this type of variant in future patients.

50 patients will be included in this study during 2 years.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • patients with rare genetic muscle diseases who have benefited from high-throughput sequencing analysis (panel of 200 genes defined by the FILNEMUS Rare Neuromuscular Disease Network) carried out at the Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Medical Genetics Department, Timone Enfant Hospital since 2017.

This criterion is necessary to limit the analysis to patients with muscular diseases among all the patients analysed by the Molecular Genetics Laboratory.

  • this genetic analysis did not identify pathogenic variants explaining the patient's phenotype This criterion is necessary in order to include only patients in diagnostic error.
  • a muscle biopsy of the patient is available in the Biological Resources Centre (CRB) at the AP-HM.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients with no muscle biopsy available in the CRB.
  • Patients with an established molecular diagnosis.
  • Patients for whom RNA extraction from a muscle biopsy sample did not yield RNA of sufficient quality (INR >7) will be excluded from the study. A maximum of two extraction attempts will be performed.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
rate of positive diagnoses using the RNAseq approachFrom enrollment to the end of study at 24 months

to determine the rate of positive diagnoses made using the RNAseq approach in patients with muscle diseases who have not yet been diagnosed. A patient is considered to be in diagnostic limbo if DNA sequencing of 200 genes responsible for muscle diseases has not identified pathogenic variants responsible for the patient's phenotype. Investigators are going to use transcriptomic analysis (RNA sequencing) in combination with innovative bioinformatics tools to identify variants with a deleterious effect at RNA level in patients with undiagnosed muscle diseases. This will make it possible to establish a molecular diagnosis and put an end to misdiagnosis in many patients.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Identification of genomic characteristicsFrom enrollment to end of study at 24 months

identify the genomic characteristics of pathogenic variants identified by the RNAseq approach. This analysis could potentially uncover certain characteristics that are specific to this type of variant, making it possible to suggest their presence in other undiagnosed patients in the future.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hopital Timone

🇫🇷

Marseille, France

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