Enriching for answers in rare diseases
- Published on: October 24 2025
- Source: medRxiv
Rare diseases affect one in 20 people globally, with many people remaining undiagnosed. For the best outcomes, rapid and accurate diagnosis of genetic variants is required; however, current methods are time-consuming and cannot access the entire genome. Here, the authors performed trio analysis with Oxford Nanopore sequencing and adaptive sampling, a targeted sequencing method. Analysing research samples from 13 patients with a rare disease, de novo and inherited variants were accurately detected, and causative variants were identified in 77% of cases. Furthermore, sequencing costs were halved by running three samples on one flow cell. These findings demonstrate a scalable and cost-effective sequencing method for rare diseases, potentially helping patients receive an accurate diagnosis for better care.
‘TBAS achieved near-complete variant phasing and detection of small variants, structural variants, and tandem repeats with high accuracy and 77% potential solve rate’
Fu et al. medRxiv (2025)
Sample type: peripheral blood
Kit: Native Barcoding Kit and the Ligation Sequencing Kit
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