The genetic architecture of pediatric cardiomyopathy

Stephanie M Ware, Surbhi Bhatnagar, Phillip J Dexheimer, James D Wilkinson, Arthi Sridhar, Xiao Fan, Yufeng Shen, Muhammad Tariq, Jeffrey A Schubert, Steven D Colan, Ling Shi, Charles E Canter, Daphne T Hsu, Neha Bansal, Steven A Webber, Melanie D Everitt, Paul F Kantor, Joseph W Rossano, Elfriede Pahl, Paolo Rusconi, Teresa M Lee, Jeffrey A Towbin, Ashwin K Lal, Wendy K Chung, Erin M Miller, Bruce Aronow, Lisa J Martin, Steven E Lipshultz, Pediatric Cardiomyopathy Registry Study Group 2022. The American Journal of Human Genetics

Abstract

To understand the genetic contribution to primary pediatric cardiomyopathy, we performed exome sequencing in a large cohort of 528 children with cardiomyopathy. Using clinical interpretation guidelines and targeting genes implicated in cardiomyopathy, we identified a genetic cause in 32% of affected individuals. Cardiomyopathy sub-phenotypes differed by ancestry, age at diagnosis, and family history. Infants < 1 year were less likely to have a molecular diagnosis (p < 0.001). Using a discovery set of 1,703 candidate genes and informatic tools, we identified rare and damaging variants in 56% of affected individuals. We see an excess burden of damaging variants in affected individuals as compared to two independent control sets, 1000 Genomes Project (p < 0.001) and SPARK parental controls (p < 1 × 10−16). Cardiomyopathy variant burden remained enriched when stratified by ancestry, variant type, and sub-phenotype, emphasizing the importance of understanding the contribution of these factors to genetic architecture. Enrichment in this discovery candidate gene set suggests multigenic mechanisms underlie sub-phenotype-specific causes and presentations of cardiomyopathy. These results identify important information about the genetic architecture of pediatric cardiomyopathy and support recommendations for clinical genetic testing in children while illustrating differences in genetic architecture by age, ancestry, and sub-phenotype and providing rationale for larger studies to investigate multigenic contributions.