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Mortality in a neonate with molybdenum cofactor deficiency illustrates the need for a comprehensive rapid precision medicine system

Stephen F. Kingsmore*, Nanda Ramchandar, Kiely James, Anna Kaisa Niemi, Annette Feigenbaum, Yan Ding, Wendy Benson, Charlotte Hobbs, Shareef Nahas, Shimul Chowdhury, David Dimmock

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Neonatal encephalopathy with seizures is a presentation in which rapid whole-genome sequencing (rWGS) has shown clinical utility and improved outcomes. We report a neonate who presented on the third day of life with seizures refractory to antiepileptic medications and neurologic and computerized tomographic findings consistent with severe generalized brain swelling. rWGS revealed compound heterozygous variants in the molybdenum cofactor synthesis gene, type 1A (MOCS1 c.∗7 + 5G>A and c.377G>A); a provisional diagnosis of molybdenum cofactor deficiency on day of life 4. An emergency investigational new drug application for intravenous replacement of the MOCS1 product, cyclic pyranopterin monophosphate, was considered, but felt unsuitable in light of the severity of disease and delay in the start of treatment. The patient died on day of life 9 despite having a precise molecular diagnosis within the first week of life. This case illustrates that an rWGS-based molecular diagnosis within the first week of life may be insufficient to improve outcomes. However, it did inform clinical decision-making with regard to resuscitation and predicted long-term outcome. We suggest that to achieve optimal reductions in morbidity and mortality, rWGS must be implemented within a comprehensive rapid precision medicine system (CRPM). Akin to newborn screening (NBS), CRPM will have onboarding, diagnosis, and precision medicine implementation components developed in response to patient and parental needs. Education of health-care providers in a learning model in which ongoing data analyses informs system improvement will be essential for optimal effectiveness of CRPM.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbera004705
JournalCold Spring Harbor Molecular Case Studies
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2020

Keywords

  • Congenital horizontal nystagmus
  • Diffuse swelling of cerebral white matter
  • Generalized tonic seizures
  • Hypouricemia
  • Infantile encephalopathy
  • Poor suck
  • Upper limb spasticity

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