GeneDx Announces Publication of SeqFirst Study Demonstrating Need for First Tier Rapid Genomic Testing for Non-Critical Care Pediatric Inpatients in The Journal of Pediatrics
--Data demonstrates that rapid genomic testing dropped the average time to a precise genetic diagnosis from almost ten months to 13 days
--Despite broad utilization in the study, rapid genomic sequencing in non-critical care inpatients yielded a diagnostic rate over 42%, comparable to critical care settings
--Study supports broader adoption of rapid genomic testing in the non-critical care inpatient setting to improve pediatric patient outcomes and lower healthcare costs
“Pediatric inpatients often remain undiagnosed and stuck in limbo without answers or treatment as their conditions worsen and costs rise for way too long,” said
Implementation of the SeqFirst approach in the clinical setting led to significant reductions in the time to a genetic diagnosis, with the average time dropping from 289 to 13 days following the policy change that enabled rES/rGS to be ordered as a first-tier test in non-critical care pediatric wards. Despite an increase in utilization of rES/rGS, the diagnostic yield remained high, exceeding 40 percent, comparable to rates in critical care settings. The acceleration of diagnoses enables earlier interventions, better care planning, and improved outcomes for children with rare and undiagnosed conditions.
“Access to rapid genomic testing shouldn’t be limited by where a child is admitted in the hospital,” said
Additional findings from the study:
- Providers caring for patients in pediatric inpatient settings are good at recognizing which patients are appropriate candidates for genetic testing, with 91 percent of consults resulting in the geneticist recommending testing.
- When rES/rGS is not used, cases may be lost to follow-up, which delays access to testing and therefore a diagnosis.
- The rate at which a precise genetic diagnosis was made from the initial encounter was over 3 times higher when rES/rGS was implemented as a first line test.
“This study underscores a major opportunity to expand timely, precise genetic diagnoses in non-critical care inpatients, a setting where genomic testing remains underutilized,” said
SeqFirst also published findings earlier this year in the
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