作者
Dong Li,Sarah E. Sheppard,Michael March,Mark R. Battig,Lea F. Surrey,Abhay Srinivasan,Leticia S. Matsuoka,Lifeng Tian,Fengxiang Wang,Christoph Seiler,Jill Dayneka,Alexandra J. Borst,Mary C. Matos,Scott M. Paulissen,Ganesh Krishnamurthy,Bede N. Nriagu,Tamjeed Sikder,Melissa Casey,Lydia Williams,Sneha Rangu,Nora O’Connor,Alexandria Thomas,Erin Pinto,Cuiping Hou,Kenny Nguyen,Renata Pellegrino da Silva,Samar N. Chehimi,Charlly Kao,Lauren Biroc,Allison Britt,Maria Queenan,Janet R. Reid,Joseph A. Napoli,D.M. Low,Seth Vatsky,James R. Treat,Christopher L. Smith,Anne Marie Cahill,Kristen Snyder,Denise M. Adams,Yoav Dori,Håkon Håkonarson
摘要
Vascular anomalies are malformations or tumors of the blood or lymphatic vasculature and can be life-threatening. Although molecularly targeted therapies can be life-saving, identification of the molecular etiology is often impeded by lack of accessibility to affected tissue samples, mosaicism or insufficient sequencing depth. In a cohort of 356 participants with vascular anomalies, including 104 with primary complex lymphatic anomalies (pCLAs), DNA from CD31+ cells isolated from lymphatic fluid or cell-free DNA from lymphatic fluid or plasma underwent ultra-deep sequencing thereby uncovering pathogenic somatic variants down to a variant allele fraction of 0.15%. A molecular diagnosis, including previously undescribed genetic causes, was obtained in 41% of participants with pCLAs and 72% of participants with other vascular malformations, leading to a new medical therapy for 63% (43/69) of participants and resulting in improvement in 63% (35/55) of participants on therapy. Taken together, these data support the development of liquid biopsy-based diagnostic techniques to identify previously undescribed genotype–phenotype associations and guide medical therapy in individuals with vascular anomalies. Genomic and cell-free DNA sequencing clarify the clinical diagnosis and inform treatment initiation in a cohort of 356 patients with vascular anomalies.