Primary ciliary dyskinesia Code R-188S303
- Description
- Number Genes
- Prevalence
- Indications and clinical utility
- Test performed and limitations
- Other Specialities
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetically heterogeneous disease, characterised by the presence of rhinorrhoea and purulent bronchorrhoea from birth or in the first months of life, recurrent upper and lower respiratory tract infections, otitis media and infertility. In 40-50% of cases it is associated with situs inversus. It is due to abnormalities of the cilia present in the epithelium of the respiratory and reproductive tracts, which leads to defective 'mucociliary clearance' that favours bacterial colonisation and overinfection.
47 genes
1/10.000-20.000
Multigenic panel aimed at the molecular diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesias with and without situs inversus and related disorders.
Method: NGS sequencing, determination of SNVs (Single Nucleotide Variants), small insertions and deletions and CNVs (Copy Number Variants)
Limits: The test is unable to determine the presence of underrepresented somatic events, balanced chromosomal rearrangements, nucleotide expansion events of repeat regions, CNVs <3 contiguous exons. <3 esoni contigui.
Some genes may have low coverage areas, where necessary or upon specific request, within the limits of methodological limitations, sequencing can be completed with alternative methods (Sanger). Some genes may be duplicated in the genome (pseudogenes), which may invalidate the analysis.