Mol Genet Metab. 2026 Mar 25. pii: S1096-7192(26)00193-9. [Epub ahead of print]148(2):
109910
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a large, rapidly expanding group of inherited disorders with variable phenotypes. More than 200 CDGs have been reported, many in only a small number of patients. Untargeted next-generation sequencing methods have led to the discovery of most CDGs, shortening the time to diagnosis in many cases. However, novel missense variants are frequently identified, and genotypes involving variants of uncertain significance often require additional testing. Our laboratory has received an increased number of referrals for CDG biochemical genetic testing, particularly for transferrin and apolipoprotein CIII isoform profiles, after variants in genes associated with the glycosylation pathway have initially been identified by molecular genetic testing. In this study, we quantified this practice and its outcomes by conducting a retrospective review of cases submitted to our laboratory for biochemical genetic testing from January 2022 through March 2025. Equivocal or uncertain molecular genetic testing results for a gene associated with a CDG were submitted for 89 patients from 87 families at the time that biochemical genetic testing was ordered. Molecular findings were reported for 52 different genes, of which PMM2 (n = 13), MAN1B1 (n = 6), and ALG13 (n = 6) were the most frequent. Two patients were excluded from further analysis due to the presence of variants in multiple genes associated with CDGs. For 23 of the 87 patients (26.4%), the CDG suspected on the basis of genotype could be supported or confirmed by biochemical genetic testing. For another 36 patients (41.4%), the suspected CDG could be excluded due to normal results, and for 16 patients (18.4%), a definitive diagnosis could not be established because the available biochemical genetic tests were not expected to be informative. In 11 cases (12.6%), the outcome was uncertain. In conclusion, health care professionals should be judicious when seeking biochemical genetic confirmation of genotypes suggestive of a CDG. Although molecular findings of uncertain significance require confirmation, not all CDGs can be identified with currently available biochemical genetic testing.
Keywords: MAN1B1-CDG; Next-generation sequencing; PMM2-CDG