Actively Recruiting
The Benefits of Long-read High-throughput Genomic Sequencing for the Causal Diagnosis of Cerebellar Ataxias
Led by Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon · Updated on 2026-01-21
210
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
181 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Cerebellar ataxias are a group of rare neurological disorders that are clinically and genetically heterogeneous, with several hundred genes and diseases known to date. Over the last decade, their diagnosis has been revolutionised by the development of high-throughput sequencing technologies such as exome/genome sequencing (ES/GS), making it possible to obtain a molecular diagnosis in a growing number of patients. However, almost 40% of patients remain without a molecular diagnosis, raising questions about the limitations of sequencing technologies based on a technique known as short-read. One limitation of short-read is its poor ability to detect repeated motif expansions, a frequent mechanism in neurology and associated with more than thirty neurogenetic diseases. Although tools for analysing ES/GS data have gradually been developed in response to this problem, their effectiveness and reliability remain moderate. To date, the gold standard for detecting these expansions remains targeted approaches such as PCR and Southern blot, which are long, tedious and costly processes that require an independent search for each expansion, forcing clinicians to select expansions and limiting diagnostic yield. In addition, there are diseases associated with expansions so rare that no French laboratory offers a diagnostic test. The recent development of long fragment genome sequencing (long-read - lrGS) could provide a solution to all these problems. These technologies are based on a sequencing process during which DNA is preserved in the form of large molecules of several tens of thousands of bases. Regions of the genome containing expansions can therefore be studied directly in their entirety, avoiding the difficulties of reconstruction from small fragments, which is the case in short-read sequencing. In addition, lrGS can characterize the size of repeated motifs and thus detect any causal expansion in an individual in a single analysis. A number of recently published studies, particularly in neurology, have demonstrated the ability of lrGS to detect pathologies with known expansions (SCA36, C9ORF72), but also to discover new ones and thus explain the molecular basis of rare pathologies (SCA27b, NOTCH2NLC). Although these sequencing technologies have been around for a number of years, access is still restricted to research work and is limited by their higher cost. Their value as a second-line diagnostic tool has yet to be demonstrated. The investigators propose to evaluate the feasibility and diagnostic yield of Oxford Nanopore lrGS in duo or trio (patients + 1 or 2 first-degree relatives) in patients with cerebellar ataxia without molecular diagnosis after short-read GS. This will be the first study to transfer this lrGS technique to the second line, in real-life conditions, for the causal genetic diagnosis of cerebellar ataxia.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
The Benefits of Long-read High-throughput Genomic Sequencing for the Causal Diagnosis of Cerebellar Ataxias
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Patient with progressive cerebellar ataxia of familial form (more than one first- or second-degree relative affected) or sporadic form with symptom onset before age 50
- Patient previously underwent short-read genome sequencing without obtaining a molecular diagnosis and has available data for reanalysis
- Ability of the patient and up to two relatives to understand and sign consent
- Sample taken from the patient and at least one affected or healthy first-degree relative (parent or sibling); healthy relatives must be older than the patient to avoid presymptomatic testing
You will not qualify if you...
- Patient or relatives not affiliated with national health insurance
- Patient and parents have a condition that contraindicates participation as judged by the investigator
- Persons under legal protection such as curatorship or guardianship
- Pregnant, parturient, or breastfeeding women
- Adults unable to provide consent
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Chu Dijon Bourgogne
Dijon, France, 21000
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
Q
Quentin THOMAS
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Number of Arms
1
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