PacBio (NASDAQ: PACB), a leading provider of high-quality, highly accurate sequencing platforms, and ARUP Laboratories announced today they are collaborating on a study intended to evaluate whether the solve rate for rare disease cases can be increased.
ARUP Laboratories has purchased a PacBio Sequel IIe system for use in the Utah NeoSeq Project. The project, launched in early 2020, leverages an accelerated sequencing and analysis pipeline intended to provide a genetic diagnosis for patients in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in less than a week. By incorporating Sequel IIe in the study, the team hopes to demonstrate the potential of long-read HiFi sequencing technology to identify variants in areas of the genome that are difficult to sequence with short-read sequencing technologies and, ultimately, increase diagnostic yield for rare disease cases.
Currently, the cause of more than half of rare disease cases worldwide remains unexplained. Using short-read whole-genome sequencing (WGS), the lab’s current diagnostic yield for rare diseases is about 30% to 50%. The study will explore the use of HiFi WGS, which provides more comprehensive, accurate, and high-definition coverage of hard-to-read regions in the human genome, to determine if it can identify variants, both small and structural, that were not readily detectible by short-read WGS. Additionally, ARUP Laboratories is seeking to develop clinical assays for areas that are difficult to sequence with short-read sequencing technologies, such as repeat expansions and pseudogenes.
“Our team at ARUP Laboratories knows that each sample represents a patient, and we want to do everything that we can to provide every patient who comes to us with a diagnosis,” said Hunter Best, Ph.D., Medical and Scientific Director of Genomics, ARUP Laboratories. “With the incorporation of HiFi WGS in the study, we believe that we will be able to obtain more insight into the samples we receive, ultimately helping our clients and their patients find answers.”
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The initial phase of the study uses HiFi WGS on those samples already sequenced with short-read technology, but without a resulting diagnosis. The goal is to wrap up this phase of the project in the first quarter of 2022. Should the initial phase of the study be successful, the project will explore using HiFi WGS as a frontline diagnostic tool for rare and inherited disorders.
“PacBio continues this march of technology evolution, and we anticipate that ultimately more than half, and perhaps up to two-thirds, of unsolved rare disease cases could be explained through HiFi sequencing,” said Jonas Korlach, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer at PacBio. “We are thrilled to be collaborating with ARUP Laboratories to help them with a study designed to find answers for patients with rare diseases. We believe that high-quality WGS is the future of medicine and that this collaboration will be one of many impactful demonstrations.”
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release may contain “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements relating to future availability, uses, accuracy, advantages, quality or performance of, or benefits or expected benefits of using, PacBio products or technologies, the suitability or utility of such products or technologies for particular applications or projects, including in connection with the Utah NeoSeq Project, potential increases invariant detection, rare disease answers, solve rates and diagnostic yields in the Utah NeoSeq Project in particular and rare disease research in general, use of PacBio technology in the development of clinical or diagnostic assays, anticipated timing to complete the Utah NeoSeq Project, including phases thereof, the potential future use of WGS in medicine, and other future events. You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements because they involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, changes in circumstances, and other factors that are, in some cases, beyond PacBio’s control and could cause actual results to differ materially from the information expressed or implied by forward-looking statements made in this press release. Factors that could materially affect actual results can be found in PacBio’s most recent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including PacBio’s most recent reports on Forms 8-K, 10-K, and 10-Q, and include those listed under the caption “Risk Factors.” PacBio undertakes no obligation to revise or update information in this press release to reflect events or circumstances in the future, even if new information becomes available.
Source: Biospace