Condition Description
Dilated cardiomyopathy is a condition characterized by the enlargement and weakening of the heart's left and/or right ventricle, resulting in a decreased ability of the heart to pump blood efficiently. Clinical features of Dilated cardiomyopathy include fatigue, shortness of breath, decreased exercise tolerance, lower extermity edema, and abdominal discomfort due to fluid retention. Dilated cardiomyopathy is also associated with arrhythmia, including atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, and ventricular fibrillation, which may result in palpitations, dizziness, syncope, or sudden cardiac arrest.
Genes
ABCC9, ACTC1, ACTN2, ALMS1, BAG3, CAV3, CRYAB, CSRP3, DES, DMD, DOLK, DSC2, DSG2, DSP, EMD, EYA4, FKRP, FKTN, FLNC, GATAD1, JUP, LAMA4, LAMP2, LDB3, LMNA, MYBPC3, MYH6, MYH7, MYPN, NEXN, NPPA, PLN, PRDM16, RAF1, RBM20, RYR2, SCN5A, SGCD, SLC22A5, TCAP TNNC1, TNNI3, TNNT2, TPM1, TTN, TTR, TXNRD2, VCL
Test Methods and Limitations
Sequencing is performed on genomic DNA using an Agilent targeted sequence capture method to enrich for the exome. Direct sequencing of the amplified captured regions was performed using 2X150bp reads on Illumina next generation sequencing (NGS) systems. A base is considered to have sufficient coverage at 20X and an exon is considered fully covered if all coding bases plus three nucleotides of flanking sequence on either side are covered at 20X or more. A list of these regions, if any, is available upon request. Alignment to the human reference genome (GRCh37) is performed and annotated variants are identified in the targeted region. Variants reviewed have a minimum coverage of 8X and an alternate allele frequency of 20% or higher. Indel and single nucleotide variants (SNVs) may be confirmed by Sanger sequence analysis before reporting at director discretion. This assay cannot detect variants in regions of the exome that are not covered, such as deep intronic, promoter and enhancer regions, areas containing large numbers of tandem repeats, and variants in mitochondrial DNA. Copy number variation (CNV) analysis detects deletions and duplications; in some instances, due to the size of the exons, sequence complexity, or other factors, not all CNVs may be analyzed or may be difficult to detect. When reported, copy number variant size is approximate. Actual breakpoint locations may lie outside of the targeted regions. CNV analysis will not detect tandem repeats, balanced alterations (reciprocal translocations, Robertsonian translocations, inversions, and balanced insertions), methylation abnormalities, triploidy, and genomic imbalances in segmentally duplicated regions. This assay is not designed to detect mosaicism; possible cases of mosaicism may be investigated at the discretion of the laboratory director. Primary data analysis is performed using Illumina bcl2fastq converter v2.19. Secondary analysis is performed using Illumina DRAGEN Bio-IT Platform v.3.10.8. Tertiary data analysis is performed using SnpEff v5.0 and Revvity Omics’ internal ODIN v.1.01 software. CNV and absence of heterozygosity are assessed using BioDiscovery’s NxClinical v6.1 software.