npj Genomic Medicine (Nov 2021)

The diagnostic trajectory of infants and children with clinical features of genetic disease

  • Brock E. Schroeder,
  • Nina Gonzaludo,
  • Katie Everson,
  • Kyi-Sin Than,
  • Jeff Sullivan,
  • Ryan J. Taft,
  • John W. Belmont

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-021-00260-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract We characterized US pediatric patients with clinical indicators of genetic diseases, focusing on the burden of disease, utilization of genetic testing, and cost of care. Curated lists of diagnosis, procedure, and billing codes were used to identify patients with clinical indicators of genetic disease in healthcare claims from Optum’s de-identified Clinformatics® Database (13,076,038 unique patients). Distinct cohorts were defined to represent permissive and conservative estimates of the number of patients. Clinical phenotypes suggestive of genetic diseases were observed in up to 9.4% of pediatric patients and up to 44.7% of critically-ill infants. Compared with controls, patients with indicators of genetic diseases had higher utilization of services (e.g., mean NICU length of stay of 31.6d in a cohort defined by multiple congenital anomalies or neurological presentations compared with 10.1d for patients in the control population (P < 0.001)) and higher overall costs. Very few patients received any genetic testing (4.2–8.4% depending on cohort criteria). These results highlight the substantial proportion of the population with clinical features associated with genetic disorders and underutilization of genetic testing in these populations.