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Exome sequencing for diagnosis of congenital hemolytic anemia

Abstract

Background

Congenital hemolytic anemia constitutes a heterogeneous group of rare genetic disorders of red blood cells. Diagnosis is based on clinical data, family history and phenotypic testing, genetic analyses being usually performed as a late step. In this study, we explored 40 patients with congenital hemolytic anemia by whole exome sequencing: 20 patients with hereditary spherocytosis and 20 patients with unexplained hemolysis.

Results

A probable genetic cause of disease was identified in 82.5% of the patients (33/40): 100% of those with suspected hereditary spherocytosis (20/20) and 65% of those with unexplained hemolysis (13/20). We found that several patients carried genetic variations in more than one gene (3/20 in the hereditary spherocytosis group, 6/13 fully elucidated patients in the unexplained hemolysis group), giving a more accurate picture of the genetic complexity of congenital hemolytic anemia. In addition, whole exome sequencing allowed us to identify genetic variants in non-congenital hemolytic anemia genes that explained part of the phenotype in 3 patients.

Conclusion

The rapid development of next generation sequencing has rendered the genetic study of these diseases much easier and cheaper. Whole exome sequencing in congenital hemolytic anemia could provide a more precise and quicker diagnosis, improve patients’ healthcare and probably has to be democratized notably for complex cases.

Background

Congenital hemolytic anemia (CHA) is a group of rare genetic disorders characterized by increased destruction of red blood cells (RBC) [1]. They result from corpuscular causes such as hemoglobin disorders, membrane diseases, RBC enzyme deficiencies or congenital dyserythropoietic anemia (CDA), or from extra-corpuscular causes such as atypical hemolytic and uremic syndromes (aHUS) due to complement pathways dysfunctions.

Membrane disorders [2,3,4,5] include hereditary spherocytosis (HS, the most frequent cause in European population with nearly 1/2000 subjects affected, MIM 182900, 182,870, 270,970, 612,653, 612,690) [6]; hereditary elliptocytosis (HE, from 1/5000–1/10,000 in European population to 1/100 in West African populations, MIM 130600, 109,270, 611,804) [7]; hereditary pyropoïkilocytosis (HPP, MIM 266140), which is a rare and severe subtype of HE, and hereditary stomatocytosis, with a dehydrated form (incidence of 1/50,000 individuals, MIM 616689) and an overhydrated form (incidence lower than 1/100,000, MIM 185000) [8]. Transmission is often autosomal dominant (AD) but de novo mutations or autosomal recessive (AR) forms (as is the case in HPP) can occur.

Defaults in enzymatic pathways of RBC metabolism are numerous [9] the most frequent being Glucose-6 Phosphate Dehydrogenase (G6PD, MIM 300908) and Pyruvate Kinase deficiencies (MIM 266200) [10]. Most of them have AR inheritance but some are X-Linked (XL) (as is the case for G6PD deficiency).

CDA (MIMs 224,120, 615,631, 224,100, 105,600, 613,673) is characterized by ineffective central erythropoiesis with progressive secondary iron overload and has AR, AD or XL transmission [11, 12]. Peripheral hemolysis can occur and misdiagnosis is often due to phenotypic overlap with other types of CHA [13, 14].

Clinical features of CHA vary from severe neonatal or even prenatal anemia with high morbidity and transfusion dependence to well-compensated hemolysis without anemia. In addition, clinical manifestations may be increased by associated comorbidities (such as hemochromatosis or hemoglobin variant) or during acute diseases, inflammatory conditions, or pregnancy.

Mutations causing CHA have been identified in more than 100 different genes, some of which are very large. Next generation sequencing (NGS) allows massive parallel sequencing of numerous genes and therefore appears as a very suitable approach for genetic dissection of CHA. Different NGS strategies have been developed over the last few years for CHA (Additional file 1, Supplementary Table S1). They included targeted gene panels (comprising 28 to 76 genes) with a success rate for diagnosis varying from 38 to 90%, depending on proband numbers (ranging from 2 to 62) and subtypes of anemia [15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23], and whole-exome sequencing (WES) in a few studies (limited to 1 to 7 probands, except two studies focusing on 38 Chinese cases of HS [24] and 24 cases of autosomal recessive HS [25]), with success rates between 29 and 100% [14, 24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]. We used WES to explore 40 CHA patients: 20 with suspected HS and 20 with unexplained hemolysis (UH) despite available phenotype exploration. We first analyzed genomic data using a predefined list of 71 CHA genes (Additional file 1, Supplementary Table 2) and extended the analysis to WES when necessary. This approach allowed us to find a probable molecular cause in 82.5% of patients.

Methods (see supplementary material for more details)

Biochemical and hematologic tests

Standard laboratory tests included cell blood count, blood smear examination, hemolysis markers, RBC density (measured by the phthalate density-distribution method, as described by Bartolucci et al in 2012 [33], with density curves profiles), hemoglobin study (beginning with isoelectric focusing and HPLC. In case of abnormalities, acid agar gel electrophoresis, Itano test, capillary electrophoresis and reverse phase HPLC could be performed, RBC enzymes activity (G6PD, Pyruvate Kinase, Hexokinase routinely measured) and EMA test (performed following the methods described by King et al in 2000 [34] and Girodon et al in 2008 [35]). When possible, osmolar gradient ektacytometry (Technicon®) and membrane protein electrophoresis (MPE) were performed.

DNA extraction

Peripheral blood EDTA sample was obtained from patients after written informed consent for genetic analysis. Genomic DNA was extracted using the Flexigene extraction kit, following manufacturer’s recommendations (Qiagen; Hilden, Germany).

Sequencing and data analysis

Library preparation was performed from 100 ng of enzymatically fragmented genomic DNA using the Kapa library hyperprep kit, following manufacturer’s recommendations (KAPABIOSYSTEMS, Wilmington, Massachusetts). Enrichment for exonic sequences was performed using the Medexome kit, following manufacturer’s recommendations (NimbleGen, Madison, Wisconsin).

NGS sequencing

Captured libraries were sequenced on a Nextseq500 instrument (Illumina, San Diego, California, USA) with high-output FlowCell and reagents, in order to obtain 150 bp paired-end reads.

Bioinformatic analyses

Demultiplexing and .fastq files generation were performed using Bcl2fastq software (v.1.8.4). Trimming of low-quality bases (Phred score < 10) and adapter-contaminated ends was performed with Trimmomatic (v.0.6.1) (http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/trim_galore/). Alignment and variant calling were performed in duplicates, using both an in-house pipeline following the BWA/GATK best practices and the Seqnext software (JSI, Ettenheim, Germany). For our in-house bioinformatic pipeline, high-quality reads were mapped on the Human reference genome (GRCh37, hg19) using BWA-MEM (v.0.7.1). SAMtools (http://www.htslib.org/) and Picard (v.1.106, https://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/) were run to remove the duplicate reads. Mean depth of coverage was >171x for all samples with > 97.6% covered at least 30X. Targeted regions with depth under 30X were selected with the Depth Of Coverage GATK tool and manually checked using bam files loaded on two reads viewers, i.e. Alamut Visual (Interactive Biosoftware, Rouen, France) and IGV (Broad institute, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA). For our first-line list of genes, all targeted regions were above 30X, excepted GPX1 and PGD first exons, which were sequenced by Sanger. Exon 1 of PIEZO1 was usually covered ~15X but was validated after a manual check of high-quality reads on bam viewers.

Variant calling was performed using the Genome Analysis Toolkit (v.3.8) with the Haplotype Caller tool in GVCF mode. VQSR filters were applied according to GATK guidelines (when QD < 2, FS > 60 for snps and > 200 for indels, ReadPosRankSum <− 8 for snps and > − 20 for indels, when MQ < 40, MQRankSum <− 12.5 and SOR < 3).

Variant annotation

The quality-filtered variant calling files (VCF) obtained were gene- and region-based annotated on GRCh37, hg19 reference genome using Annovar [36] and dbSNP141.

Functional annotation was made using in silico prediction tools and amino acid conservation scores (SIFT (http://sift.jcvi.org/), PolyPhen-2 (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/), Mutation Taster (http://www.mutationtaster.org/), align GVGD (http://agvgd.iarc.fr/) and CADD (https://cadd.gs.washington.edu/)). MaxEntScan (http://genes.mit.edu/burgelab/maxent/Xmaxentscan_scoreseq.html) and Human Splicing Finder3.0 (http://www.umd.be/HSF/) were used for splicing effect predictions. Protein domain functions were determined by using the SMART software (http://smart.embl-heidelberg.de/) and are available in Table S3. Functional classification following ACMG criteria [37] was performed using InterVar [38] and Ingenuity Variant Analysis (IVA) software (Qiagen).

Variants filtering and selection

According to ACMG guidelines, we excluded all variants tagged as Benign.

According to Annovar gene- or region-based annotations, we excluded variants disrupting microRNA binding sites, promoter, intergenic, ncRNA as well as intronic variants > 10 nucleotides of a splice site (−splicing_threshold 10) and kept only those present on an alternative transcript. Variants in regions with segmental duplications were excluded (genomicSuperDups).

All the possible inheritance patterns were tested according to disease knowledge. Variants with population frequency (Minor Allele Frequency, MAF) in gnomAD, ExAC, 1000 g and ESP6500 higher than 5% for AR disorders and higher than 1% for AD disorders were filtered out, except variants known to have modulating effects on phenotype, such as HFE variants (H63D or C282Y) involved in iron overload and the SPTA1 alpha-Lely polymorphism (c.6531-12C > T) involved in membrane disorders. This latter variant is known to be pathogenic when associated in trans with a deleterious variant of SPTA1 [39].

The first-line analysis was focused on 71 known CHA genes as a target gene panel (Additionnal file 1, Supplementary Table S2). An extended WES analysis was performed using IVA filters “biological context” and “phenotype driven”. In addition, we performed a complementary analysis of 2138 genes encoding erythrocyte proteins identified by proteomic studies [40,41,42].

New variants

All new variants classified as VUS, likely pathogenic or pathogenic have been registered in the Clinvar database (https://www-ncbi-nlm-nih-gov.gate2.inist.fr/clinvar/ see Additional file 1, Supplementary Table S4).

Sanger sequencing

Sanger sequencing was used to confirm each potentially deleterious variation found by NGS. Primers sequences and PCR conditions are available upon request.

Patients

Forty patients suffering from non-immune hemolysis with negative direct antiglobulin tests were submitted to WES sequencing. Clinical and biological data are available in Supplementary Tables S5 and S6 (normal values in Additional file 1 and Supplementary Table S7). Blood smear results and genetic results are available in Tables S8 and S11. In silico analysis of genetic variants is available in Additional file 1, supplementary Table S3.

Twenty patients had a HS phenotype, among which four were apparently sporadic cases (P1, P3, P13, P14). The 20 other patients had UH, with either discordant or non-conclusive phenotypical tests. For several patients, EMA test results were discordant with ektacytometry. In the other cases, EMA test and ektacytometry were either normal or atypical. Three of these patients had UH associated to a sickle cell trait (A/S). Several patients had no familial history. Despite of this fact they were considered as potential cases of CHA because phenotypic exploration of common acquired causes of hemolytic anemia such as complete antiglobulin tests (Coombs test) and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria test remained negative.

Results

Genetic results are available in Tables 1 and 2 and in Additional file 1, supplementary Tables S3 and S8 to S11.Clinico-biological data are available in Additional file 1, supplementary Tables S5 to S7.

Table 1 Genetic results of HS patient
Table 2 Genetic results of UH patients

We defined two groups: one with clear phenotype (HS group) and one with unclear phenotype (UH group). The different types of variants identified are summarized in Fig. 1.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Distribution of mutations types

HS group

We identified the probable genetic cause of hemolysis in all HS patients using target genes panel analysis (71 CHA genes) on WES data. Nineteen patients were heterozygous carriers of one mutation in ANK1 (8 patients), SLC4A1 (6 patients), or SPTB (5 patients). All patients had different mutations, among which 13 were novel and 8 had already been reported. In one family with typical HS (P11 and affected relatives), affected members harbored 2 heterozygous probably damaging variations, one in SPTB (stop-gained) and the other in SPTA1 (already-reported missense mutation, previously found in a case of HPP which also harbored the alpha-Lely polymorphism in trans). Such an association has rarely been reported in the literature [15, 16, 43, 44]. In 3 families (P4, P10 and P11), genetic tests could be extended to other affected family members and showed cosegregation of mutations and disease (Fig. 2). Two HS patients also had additional mutations in other CHA genes. P1 carried a heterozygous mutation of alpha-globin gene, called Tunis-Bizerte hemoglobin, responsible for an alpha- thalassemia trait [45]. P17 carried a variant of uncertain significance (VUS) in PIEZO1 (p.V860M). In total, 3 out of 20 HS patients (P1, P11 and P17) had variations in two different CHA genes. Patient P2, who had significant iron overload also harbored 2 variants in HFE (H63D and C282Y) which had been previously found during iron overload exploration.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Pedigrees of 3 HS families and 6 UH families. Legend: Black squares: affected males; black circles: affected females; open squares: unaffected males; open circles: unaffected females; arrow: the proband. 2a = P11 family pedigree (HS); 2b = P10 family pedigree (HS); 2c = P4 family pedigree (HS); 2d = P25 family pedigree (CDA2); 2e = P27 family pedigree (UH); 2f: P31 family pedigree (GARDOS); 2 g: P33 family pedigree (UH); 2 h: P36 family pedigree (multiple association); 2i: P40 family pedigree (ATP11C hemolysis)

UH GROUP

Twenty patients were classified as UH because of discordant or non-contributive clinical features and/or biological tests. Familial segregation study could be performed in 6 families (P25, P27, P31, P33, P36, P40, Fig. 2).

Twelve UH patients have been fully characterized (P21, P22, P25, P29, P30, P31, P32, P36, P37, P38, P39, and P40) by target gene panel analysis of 71 CHA genes on the WES data. One UH patient (P35) could be fully characterized thanks to WES analysis. Seven other UH patients have not been fully characterized (P23, P24, P26, P27, P28, P33 and P34) despite extended WES analysis. Interestingly, in those patients WES identified two new possible target genes.

Among the 12 fully characterized UH patients, nine harbored mutations in genes encoding membrane proteins. SPTA1 was the most frequently mutated gene (in 6 probands: P21, P22, P29, P36, P37, and P39). Variations in SPTA1 result in HE, HPP or HS depending on variants type and phase. In P37 and P39, genotypes and phenotypic data (clinical features, blood smear) were suggestive of HPP. We could not clearly decipher between HE or HPP for P21, 22 and P29. Other membrane genes with mutations were PIEZO1 (P30 and P36, DHSt), KCNN4 (P31, GARDOS MIM 616689), SPTB (P32, elliptocytosis) and SLC4A1 (P36, SEA ovalocytosis, MIM 166900). Among them, some had original presentation. P30 had myelodysplasia and important hemolysis without any family history. She carried a constitutional (present in blood and hair bulb DNA) heterozygous PIEZO1 variant of uncertain significance (VUS) (p.P376A) and had atypical ektacytometry results. P36 is one of the 3 A/S symptomatic patients explored in our study (P29, P32 and P36). This woman originating from Comoros islands experienced spleen infarct after a long-distance flight and showed the association of a HbS trait, SEA ovalocytosis (SLC4A1: p.Ala400_Ala408del), a G6PD MATERA A- p.V98M variant at heterozygous state [46], a homozygous SPTA1 variation (p.E2224D) and a PIEZO1 mutation (p.R457C) already involved in DHSt [16]. Her daughter (P36–1) also presented with hemolytic anemia and harbored the same mutations (the SPTA1 variant being heterozygous). Her blood smear showed anisopoikilocytosis and some stomatocytes. Another relative (P36–2) was explored and carried the same mutations as P36–1. He had a hemolytic anemia and a retinopathy typical of sickle cell disease.

Three fully characterized UH patients had mutations in genes not encoding membrane proteins: SEC23B in P25 with CDA type 2; CFH in P38 with aHUS; ATP11C in P40. P25 harbored 2 already described mutations in SEC23B gene at compound heterozygous state (Fig. 2) allowing correction of diagnosis towards CDA type 2 and not HS as initially suspected.

P38 carried a heterozygous mutation in CFH (p.R53C), which had previously been found in patients with preeclampsia-related SHUa [47], in complement-related glomerulopathies [48] and in familial forms of AMD (age-related macular degeneration, MIM 610698) [49]. She also carried a heterozygous PIEZO1 VUS (p.G1416R) but had normal ektacytometry and blood smear. In this case one single mutation in CFH probably explains the entire phenotype (AMD, preeclampsia, hemolysis and altered renal function). P40 carried a likely pathogenic hemizygous variation in ATP11C (p.P812S). This X chromosome variation is recorded in gnomAD in only one heterozygous female (no hemizygous males or homozygous females recorded). He also carried one VUS in ANK1. His blood smear was normal and ektacytometry showed atypical profile with only dehydration and no change in osmotic resistance. Functional testing of flippase activity is in progress.

Among the 12 fully characterized UH patients, 6 had mutations in several CHA genes:

  • P29HBB S mutation and SPTA1

  • P31, KCNN4 and PIEZO1

  • P32, HBB S mutation and SPTB

  • P36,HBB S mutation, SPTA1, SLC4A1, PIEZO1 and G6PD

  • P38,CFH and PIEZO1

  • P40, ATP11C and ANK1,

One additional UH patient was characterized thanks to WES analysis

P35 was found to harbor a heterozygous deleterious variation in SH2B3: c.1A > G (initiation codon loss). This result allowed to reconsider diagnosis towards a probable myeloproliferative condition. SH2B3 somatic mutations have been reported in myeloproliferative neoplasms such as primary myelofibrosis [50]. He also carried a heterozygous VUS in the SCN9A gene c.2938G > T (p.A980S) which likely explained the severity of painful crises reported in this patient. SCN9A is involved in neurogenic painful syndromes [51].

Seven UH patients remained unsolved (P23, P27 and P28) or partially solved (P24, P26, P33 and P34) despite WES extended analysis. P23 carried a heterozygous ALAS2 promoter variation (c.-258C > G), which had previously been reported as a cause of X-linked sideroblastic anemia (MIM 300751) [52]. This variation is present in gnomAD at an allelic frequency of 0.54%, with 39 hemizygous males, which suggests that it is most probably a rare benign polymorphism. No other relevant genetic variation was found. P27 was a female child with major hemolytic anemia at birth and neonatal splenomegaly with thrombocytopenia. Her mother, maternal aunt and maternal grand-father had the same phenotype. She carried a heterozygous variation in CFH (p.Q950H) [53], which was absent in the mother and the maternal aunt and is therefore not responsible for CHA in this family. No other relevant genetic variation was found. P28 was carrier of two heterozygous variants in two genes involved in CDA: one in SEC23B (p.V426I) and one in CDAN1 (p.P86S). No case of digenic inheritance has yet been reported in CDA. No other relevant genetic variation was found. The other patients had a part of their phenotype explained by WES. In P24, candidate gene variations could be identified thanks to WES. A heterozygous missense variation was found in the gene encoding the RNA-specific Adenosine Deaminase (ADAR) (p.P529L). No ADAR mutation has been associated to date with congenital hemolysis in humans but several studies showed a crucial role for ADAR in mouse erythropoiesis. This patient also carried an apparently homozygous variation of TRPV4 (p.P638L), present in the gnomAD database at an allelic frequency of 0.03% without any homozygotes recorded (over > 138,000 subjects tested). TRPV4 mutations have been found in skeletal dysplasia, arthropathies and in a familial form of osteonecrosis [54]. The TRPV4 mutation could explain osteonecrosis but not hemolysis. P26 carried HAMP and HFE variations probably explaining iron overload and CD46 variation for susceptibility to hemolysis. HAMP gene is out of our genes panel analysis. P33 harbored G6PD and SPTB variations, which combination cannot explain the severe phenotype. P34 had UH and iron overload, and variations in 3 genes: a homozygous p.H63D variation in HFE, which may contribute to iron overload even though its implication is not totally clear [55, 56], a heterozygous ABCG8 VUS and 2 heterozygous ADAMTS13 VUS. ABCG8 mutations are found in AR sitosterolemia and AD xanthelasma [57]. A single heterozygous ABCG8 variation is not sufficient to explain hemolysis. This patient had a normal platelet count and ADAMTS13 enzyme activity testing showed a 39% decrease (suggestive of a heterozygous loss-of-function). Normal ADAMTS13 activity in P34 does not support a diagnosis of AR Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (MIM 274150), and therefore cannot explain hemolysis.

In summary, among n UH patients, 12 patients could be fully characterized thanks to targeted analysis on CHA genes. Eight benefited from extended WES analysis leading to full characterization in one additionnal patient and 7 UH patients not fully characterized but two new potential target genes were identified by WES.

Discussion

In this study, WES sequencing allowed the identification of a genetic cause of CHA in 33 out of 40 patients (82.5%), including 20 HS patients (100%) and 13 UH patients (65%). All HS patients harbored mutations in already-known HS genes: ANK1, SLC4A1, SPTB, SPTA1. All identified variants (21, among which 13 novel) were classified as likely pathogenic or pathogenic loss-of-function mutations. A recent exomic study of 38 Chinese patients with suspected HS found mutations of ANK1 or SPTB in all patients [24]. Gallagher et al in 2019 [25] reported on a group of 24 recessive HS patients explored by WES and whole genome sequencing (WGS), all having mutations found in SPTA1. Our results, together with those previously published, suggest that there are probably no other major HS genes. In mouse, beta-adducin deficiency has been shown to cause spherocytosis [58], but no mutations of adducins have yet been identified in human HS.

In UH patients, NGS analysis allowed diagnosis in 13 patients (P21, P25, P29, P31, P22, P30, P32, P35, P36, P37, P38, P39, and P40). Rate of positivity is lower in UH patients than in HS cases, probably because of the lack of a clear phenotype.

One important finding of our study is the frequent association of several genetic variants in different genes in a same patient, emphasizing the genetic complexity of CHA. Twenty two percents (9/40) of patients harbored several variations in different CHA genes. Among HS patients, only 3 (15%) had variations in other genes, whereas in the UH group, 9/20 (45%) had an association of variants in different CHA genes. The frequent occurrence of multiple genetic variants in single UH patients suggests that this association could contribute to the complexity of the phenotype. Phenotypical tests alone are not able to detect all those variants associations, some of which can have therapeutic consequences (contra-indication of splenectomy in DHSt for example). Such associations of several deleterious variants in genes causing RBC diseases have rarely been reported [59,60,61] and could be explained in part by the patients’origins. For example, the P36 family that carried variations in 5 CHA genes originated from Comoros Islands, a region of endemic malaria. Plasmodium has been shown to exert a selective pressure on various RBC proteins [62].

Our study also emphasizes the usefulness of exomic approach in the field of CHA, both for discovery of candidate genes (such as TRPV4 or ADAR) and for diagnosis reorientation. Thanks to exomic capture, we reorientated initial diagnosis for P35 (probable myeloproliferative syndrome) and explained a part of the phenotype in P24 (osteonecrosis and TRPV4), P26 (HAMP and iron overload) and P35 (painful crisis and SCN9A). The cases of P27 remained unsolved despite large familial investigations. Exomic capture allowed us to find a possible cause for P24’s osteonecrosis since this patient harbored a homozygous TRPV4 variation. TRPV4 encodes a non-selective calcium-permeant cation channel expressed in different cell types [63] but not in erythrocytes and it has never been associated with hemolysis. Mutations have already been involved in skeletal dysplasia, hereditary neuropathies, arthropathies [64] and recently in a familial case of osteonecrosis [65]. All variants reported were heterozygous and only one paper described a familial case of complex phenotype with severe intellectual disability and neuropathy associated with compound heterozygosity for TRPV4 mutations [66]. Our patient does not present any neurological symptoms. In this patient, we also found an ADAR variation that could be a good candidate for hemolysis. No mutations in ADAR have yet been associated with hemolysis in humans. Previous studies in mouse showed that ADAR is implicated in erythropoiesis [67, 68]. ADAR heterozygous mutations are been found in dyschromatosis symmetrica hereditaria [69] and homozygous or compound heterozygous variations in Aicardi-Goutières syndrome [70].

During the last few years, several NGS studies of CHA have been published [14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24, 26,27,28,29,30,31,32, 71] and have shown their usefullness (Additional file 1, Supplementary Table S1). Two recent studies using targeted approaches, focused on 21 index cases and 62 families respectively [16, 17]. They obtained a positive rate (elucidation of the genetic cause of anemia) of 62 and 65% of cases respectively. In our study, this rate was 82.5%. In the two former studies and ours, the positive rate appears to be considerably higher than the WES success rate obtained in other genetic diseases, such as cardiomyopathies or intellectual deficiencies: 62 to 82.5% for CHA versus 30% on average for cardiomyopathies or intellectual deficiencies [72, 73]. The two recent studies of Wang R. et al 2018 and Gallagher et al 2019 reporting WES findings in relatively large CHA samples [24, 25] were only dedicated to HS patient. Our results suggest that WES is highly useful in CHA patients, whether they have HS or UH. Recommendations proposed by King et al in 2015 [13], and compiled by Kim et al in 2017 [74] concerning the indications of genetic testing for CHA diagnosis need to be updated, as they only recommended genetic testing in a limited number of cases and as a second diagnostic step. A recent article of Rets et al in 2019 suggests that targeted NGS becomes the diagnosis standard tool in CHA molecular testing and that WES and WGS could represents the future [75]. Our results show that molecular diagnosis with WES could easily be democratized and be of great help to understand patients’ phenotype, adapting therapeutic approach (such as splenectomy) and to allow genetic counseling. Indeed, exomic approach appeared as particularly useful in UH cases and for complex phenotypes.

Conclusion

This work emphasizes the usefulness of WES in CHA in order to reach a right diagnosis for each patient. This allows clinical geneticists to provide a personally fitted genetic counseling and specialized clinicians to adjust treatment in some cases. When first-line phenotypic analyses have not been successful in elucidating the disease cause, genetic tests using NGS and especially WES sequencing appears as very helpful to uncover the intricate genetic defects causing CHA and associated manifestations. The recent developments of exomic or genomic sequencing technologies make them the most suitable and cheapest approaches for the genetic diagnosis of these disorders, keeping in mind the absolute necessity of pluridisciplinar teams able to deal with incidental or unexpected findings if needed.

Democratization of NGS should lead to update the current recommendations and diagnosis strategy concerning the place of genetic testing in CHA on Fig. 3. The frequent discovery of several mutations in different genes in a same patient also suggests to reconsider the genetic bases of CHA: apparently monogenic diseases may in fact be oligogenic, with satellite variations acting as modulators of the phenotype or resulting in new clinical entities.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Diagnosis strategy proposition for CHA

Deeper mechanistic studies are warranted to better understand the relationship between genotype and phenotype, especially in patients with atypical or poorly described variants association and to explain VUS. However, some interactions may prove difficult to investigate with currently existing tools. The development of next generation phenotypic tools, such as RBC metabolomics and proteomics, may represent new steps in the exploration of RBC genetic disorders and key tools for variant interpretation.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Abbreviations

AMD:

Age-Related Macular Degeneration

AR:

Autosomic recessive

AD:

Autosomic dominant

CHA:

Congenital hemolytic anemia

DHSt:

Dehydrated hereditary stomatocytosis

GFF:

Glomerular filtration flow

HS:

Hereditary spherocytosis

HPP:

Hereditary pyropoïkilocytosis

HE:

Hereditary elliptocytosis

MDS:

Myelodysplastic syndrome

RBC:

Red blood cell

MPE:

Membrane protein electrophoresis

MPN:

Myeloproliferative neoplasms

NGS:

Next generation sequencing

TPI:

Triose phosphate isomerase

UH:

Unexplained hemolysis

aHUS:

Atypical hemolytic and uremic syndrome

VUS:

Variant of uncertain significance

WES:

Whole exome sequencing

WGS:

Whole genome sequencing

XLD:

X-linked disorder

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Acknowledgements

We thank Ms. Cécile Aubrun for her help in patients’ assessment.

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L.M.H. analyzed and validated genetic data and wrote the paper; A.A. developed and performed bioinformatic analyses and reviewed the paper; B.B. performed EMA tests, examinations of blood smears and reviewed the paper; M.S. was in charge of enzymatic activities measurement; C.G. and V.O. performed genetic tests; O.W.B. performed EMA tests and reviewed the paper; S.P. was responsible for sickle cell disease genetic exploration; V.P. performed ektacytometry analysis and reviewed the paper; K.G. made membrane proteins electrophoresis; M.B. made enzymatic activities measurement and designed panel genes list; C.G. Z.M., M.D., A.P., N.C.C. and M.M. provided patients for study; P.B. provided patients for study and technical support for research; S.M. supervised enzymatic activities measurement and hemoglobin studies; B.F. supervised the entire study, validated genetic data and wrote the paper; F.G. supervised the entire study, provided patients and reviewed the paper. The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript.

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Correspondence to Lamisse Mansour-Hendili.

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Mansour-Hendili, L., Aissat, A., Badaoui, B. et al. Exome sequencing for diagnosis of congenital hemolytic anemia. Orphanet J Rare Dis 15, 180 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-020-01425-5

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