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Dive into the research topics where Laurel K. Willig is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurel K. Willig.


The Lancet Respiratory Medicine | 2015

Whole-genome sequencing for identification of Mendelian disorders in critically ill infants: a retrospective analysis of diagnostic and clinical findings

Laurel K. Willig; Josh E Petrikin; Laurie Smith; Carol J. Saunders; Isabelle Thiffault; Neil Miller; Sarah E. Soden; Julie A. Cakici; Suzanne Herd; Greyson P Twist; Aaron Noll; Mitchell Creed; Patria M Alba; Shannon L Carpenter; Mark A. Clements; Ryan T Fischer; J Allyson Hays; Howard W. Kilbride; Ryan J. McDonough; Jamie L Rosterman; Sarah L. Tsai; Lee Zellmer; Emily Farrow; Stephen F. Kingsmore

BACKGROUND Genetic disorders and congenital anomalies are the leading causes of infant mortality. Diagnosis of most genetic diseases in neonatal and paediatric intensive care units (NICU and PICU) is not sufficiently timely to guide acute clinical management. We used rapid whole-genome sequencing (STATseq) in a level 4 NICU and PICU to assess the rate and types of molecular diagnoses, and the prevalence, types, and effect of diagnoses that are likely to change medical management in critically ill infants. METHODS We did a retrospective comparison of STATseq and standard genetic testing in a case series from the NICU and PICU of a large childrens hospital between Nov 11, 2011, and Oct 1, 2014. The participants were families with an infant younger than 4 months with an acute illness of suspected genetic cause. The intervention was STATseq of trios (both parents and their affected infant). The main measures were the diagnostic rate, time to diagnosis, and rate of change in management after standard genetic testing and STATseq. FINDINGS 20 (57%) of 35 infants were diagnosed with a genetic disease by use of STATseq and three (9%) of 32 by use of standard genetic testing (p=0·0002). Median time to genome analysis was 5 days (range 3-153) and median time to STATseq report was 23 days (5-912). 13 (65%) of 20 STATseq diagnoses were associated with de-novo mutations. Acute clinical usefulness was noted in 13 (65%) of 20 infants with a STATseq diagnosis, four (20%) had diagnoses with strongly favourable effects on management, and six (30%) were started on palliative care. 120-day mortality was 57% (12 of 21) in infants with a genetic diagnosis. INTERPRETATION In selected acutely ill infants, STATseq had a high rate of diagnosis of genetic disorders. Most diagnoses altered the management of infants in the NICU or PICU. The very high infant mortality rate indicates a substantial need for rapid genomic diagnoses to be allied with a novel framework for precision medicine for infants in NICU and PICU who are diagnosed with genetic diseases to improve outcomes. FUNDING Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Human Genome Research Institute, and National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.


Seminars in Perinatology | 2015

Rapid whole genome sequencing and precision neonatology

Joshua E. Petrikin; Laurel K. Willig; Laurie D. Smith; Stephen F. Kingsmore

Traditionally, genetic testing has been too slow or perceived to be impractical to initial management of the critically ill neonate. Technological advances have led to the ability to sequence and interpret the entire genome of a neonate in as little as 26 h. As the cost and speed of testing decreases, the utility of whole genome sequencing (WGS) of neonates for acute and latent genetic illness increases. Analyzing the entire genome allows for concomitant evaluation of the currently identified 5588 single gene diseases. When applied to a select population of ill infants in a level IV neonatal intensive care unit, WGS yielded a diagnosis of a causative genetic disease in 57% of patients. These diagnoses may lead to clinical management changes ranging from transition to palliative care for uniformly lethal conditions for alteration or initiation of medical or surgical therapy to improve outcomes in others. Thus, institution of 2-day WGS at time of acute presentation opens the possibility of early implementation of precision medicine. This implementation may create opportunities for early interventional, frequently novel or off-label therapies that may alter disease trajectory in infants with what would otherwise be fatal disease. Widespread deployment of rapid WGS and precision medicine will raise ethical issues pertaining to interpretation of variants of unknown significance, discovery of incidental findings related to adult onset conditions and carrier status, and implementation of medical therapies for which little is known in terms of risks and benefits. Despite these challenges, precision neonatology has significant potential both to decrease infant mortality related to genetic diseases with onset in newborns and to facilitate parental decision making regarding transition to palliative care.


Pediatrics | 2017

Newborn Sequencing in Genomic Medicine and Public Health.

Jonathan S. Berg; Pankaj B. Agrawal; Donald B. Bailey; Alan H. Beggs; Steven E. Brenner; Amy Brower; Julie A. Cakici; Ozge Ceyhan-Birsoy; Kee Chan; Flavia Chen; Robert Currier; Dmitry Dukhovny; Robert C. Green; Julie Harris-Wai; Ingrid A. Holm; Brenda Iglesias; Galen Joseph; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Barbara A. Koenig; Pui-Yan Kwok; John D. Lantos; Steven Leeder; Megan A. Lewis; Amy L. McGuire; Laura V. Milko; Sean D. Mooney; Richard B. Parad; Stacey Pereira; Joshua E. Petrikin; Bradford C. Powell

The rapid development of genomic sequencing technologies has decreased the cost of genetic analysis to the extent that it seems plausible that genome-scale sequencing could have widespread availability in pediatric care. Genomic sequencing provides a powerful diagnostic modality for patients who manifest symptoms of monogenic disease and an opportunity to detect health conditions before their development. However, many technical, clinical, ethical, and societal challenges should be addressed before such technology is widely deployed in pediatric practice. This article provides an overview of the Newborn Sequencing in Genomic Medicine and Public Health Consortium, which is investigating the application of genome-scale sequencing in newborns for both diagnosis and screening.


npj Genomic Medicine | 2016

Constellation: a tool for rapid, automated phenotype assignment of a highly polymorphic pharmacogene, CYP2D6 , from whole-genome sequences

Greyson P Twist; Andrea Gaedigk; Neil Miller; Emily Farrow; Laurel K. Willig; Darrell L. Dinwiddie; Josh E Petrikin; Sarah E. Soden; Suzanne Herd; Margaret Gibson; Julie A. Cakici; Amanda K. Riffel; J. Steven Leeder; Deendayal Dinakarpandian; Stephen F. Kingsmore

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/npjgenmed.2015.7.].


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine | 2016

Whole-Exome Sequencing and Whole-Genome Sequencing in Critically Ill Neonates Suspected to Have Single-Gene Disorders

Laurie Smith; Laurel K. Willig; Stephen F. Kingsmore

As the ability to identify the contribution of genetic background to human disease continues to advance, there is no discipline of medicine in which this may have a larger impact than in the care of the ill neonate. Newborns with congenital malformations, syndromic conditions, and inherited disorders often undergo an extensive, expensive, and long diagnostic process, often without a final diagnosis resulting in significant health care, societal, and personal costs. Although ethical concerns have been raised about the use of whole-genome sequencing in medical practice, its role in the diagnosis of rare disorders in ill neonates in tertiary care neonatal intensive care units has the potential to augment or modify the care of this vulnerable population of patients.


Genome Medicine | 2015

Emergency medical genomes: a breakthrough application of precision medicine

Stephen F. Kingsmore; Josh E Petrikin; Laurel K. Willig; Erin M Guest

Today there exist two medical applications where relatively strong evidence exists to support the broad adoption of genome-informed precision medicine. These are the differential diagnosis of single gene diseases and genotype-based selection of patients for targeted cancer therapies. However, despite the availability of the


Kidney International | 2015

Renal systems biology of patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome

Ephraim L. Tsalik; Laurel K. Willig; Brandon J. Rice; Jennifer C. van Velkinburgh; Robert P. Mohney; Jonathan E. McDunn; Darrell L. Dinwiddie; Neil Miller; Eric S. Mayer; Seth W. Glickman; Anja Kathrin Jaehne; Robert H. Glew; Mohan L. Sopori; Ronny M. Otero; Kevin S. Harrod; Charles B. Cairns; Vance G. Fowler; Emanuel P. Rivers; Christopher W. Woods; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Raymond J. Langley

1000 genome and


npj Genomic Medicine | 2018

The NSIGHT1-randomized controlled trial: rapid whole-genome sequencing for accelerated etiologic diagnosis in critically ill infants

Josh E Petrikin; Julie A. Cakici; Michelle M. Clark; Laurel K. Willig; Nathaly M. Sweeney; Emily Farrow; Carol J. Saunders; Isabelle Thiffault; Neil Miller; Lee Zellmer; Suzanne Herd; Anne Holmes; Serge Batalov; Narayanan Veeraraghavan; Laurie D. Smith; David Dimmock; J. Steven Leeder; Stephen F. Kingsmore

700 exome for research, there is as yet little broad uptake of genomic medicine, even in these applications. Significant impediments to mainstream adoption exist, including unavailability in many institutions, lack of scalability in others, a dearth of physician understanding of interpreted genome or exome results or knowledge of how to translate consequent precision medicine care plans, and a lack of test reimbursement. In short, genomic medicine lacks a breakthrough application. Rapid genome sequencing of acutely ill infants with suspected genetic diseases (STATseq) may become that application when scaled to dozens of trios per day without loss of timeliness or accuracy. Also critical for broad adoption is embedding STATseq in software for timely patient ascertainment, augmented intelligence for interpretation, explanation of results for generalist physicians, and dynamic precision medicine decision support.


npj Genomic Medicine | 2016

Clinical detection of deletion structural variants in whole-genome sequences

Aaron Noll; Neil Miller; Laurie Smith; Byunggil Yoo; Stephanie Fiedler; Linda D. Cooley; Laurel K. Willig; Josh E Petrikin; Julie A. Cakici; John Lesko; Angela Newton; Kali Detherage; Isabelle Thiffault; Carol J. Saunders; Emily Farrow; Stephen F. Kingsmore

A systems biology approach was used to comprehensively examine the impact of renal disease and hemodialysis (HD) on patient response during critical illness. To achieve this we examined the metabolome, proteome, and transcriptome of 150 patients with critical illness, stratified by renal function. Quantification of plasma metabolites indicated greater change as renal function declined, with the greatest derangements in patients receiving chronic HD. Specifically, 6 uremic retention molecules, 17 other protein catabolites, 7 modified nucleosides, and 7 pentose phosphate sugars increased as renal function declined, consistent with decreased excretion or increased catabolism of amino acids and ribonucleotides. Similarly, the proteome showed increased levels of low-molecular weight proteins and acute phase reactants. The transcriptome revealed a broad-based decrease in mRNA levels among patients on HD. Systems integration revealed an unrecognized association between plasma RNASE1 and several RNA catabolites and modified nucleosides. Further, allantoin, N1-methyl-4-pyridone-3-carboxamide, and n-acetylaspartate were inversely correlated with the majority of significantly down-regulated genes. Thus, renal function broadly affected the plasma metabolome, proteome, and peripheral blood transcriptome during critical illness; changes not effectively mitigated by hemodialysis. These studies allude to several novel mechanisms whereby renal dysfunction contributes to critical illness.


Pediatrics | 2018

Parents Refusing Dialysis for a 3-Month-Old With Renal Failure

Laurel K. Willig; Erin Talati Paquette; D. Micah Hester; Bradley A. Warady; John D. Lantos

Genetic disorders are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in infants in neonatal and pediatric intensive care units (NICU/PICU). While genomic sequencing is useful for genetic disease diagnosis, results are usually reported too late to guide inpatient management. We performed an investigator-initiated, partially blinded, pragmatic, randomized, controlled trial to test the hypothesis that rapid whole-genome sequencing (rWGS) increased the proportion of NICU/PICU infants receiving a genetic diagnosis within 28 days. The participants were families with infants aged <4 months in a regional NICU and PICU, with illnesses of unknown etiology. The intervention was trio rWGS. Enrollment from October 2014 to June 2016, and follow-up until November 2016. Of all, 26 female infants, 37 male infants, and 2 infants of undetermined sex were randomized to receive rWGS plus standard genetic tests (n = 32, cases) or standard genetic tests alone (n = 33, controls). The study was terminated early due to loss of equipoise: 73% (24) controls received genomic sequencing as standard tests, and 15% (five) controls underwent compassionate cross-over to receive rWGS. Nevertheless, intention to treat analysis showed the rate of genetic diagnosis within 28 days of enrollment (the primary end-point) to be higher in cases (31%, 10 of 32) than controls (3%, 1 of 33; difference, 28% [95% CI, 10–46%]; p = 0.003). Among infants enrolled in the first 25 days of life, the rate of neonatal diagnosis was higher in cases (32%, 7 of 22) than controls (0%, 0 of 23; difference, 32% [95% CI, 11–53%];p = 0.004). Median age at diagnosis (25 days [range 14–90] in cases vs. 130 days [range 37–451] in controls) and median time to diagnosis (13 days [range 1–84] in cases, vs. 107 days [range 21–429] in controls) were significantly less in cases than controls (p = 0.04). In conclusion, rWGS increased the proportion of NICU/PICU infants who received timely diagnoses of genetic diseases.Whole genome sequencing: Speedier diagnoses in infantsGenetic disorders in critically ill infants can be diagnosed in as little as 26 h by rapid whole genome sequencing (rWGS). A study led by Stephen F. Kingsmore at the Rady Children’s Institute for Genomic Medicine in San Diego and Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City compared the time to genetic diagnosis in 65 infants with inherited diseases of unknown cause using rWGS, clinical confirmatory testing and standard genetic tests or standard genetic tests alone. They found that the addition of rWGS including confirmatory testing significantly decreased the time to diagnosis, which in newborns can mean the difference between life and death. Because of the increasing accessibility and decreasing costs of the technology and the critical need for timely and effective intervention in infants with suspected genetic diseases, the authors advocate the use of rWGS as a first-line diagnostic test.

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Neil Miller

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Julie A. Cakici

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Emily Farrow

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Josh E Petrikin

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Laurie Smith

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Sarah E. Soden

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Suzanne Herd

Children's Mercy Hospital

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