QIAGEN Launches New Bioinformatics Solution for Hereditary Diseases

Enhancing and accelerating analysis and interpretation of next-generation sequencing data

5 Oct 2015
Lois Manton-O'Byrne, PhD
Executive Editor

Product news

QIAGEN N.V. today announced the launch of a new QIAGEN hereditary disease solution for research labs to accelerate solve rates in diagnostic odyssey cases, while freeing up time and resources by enabling researchers to directly focus on the right causal candidates. The offering includes QIAGEN’s Biomedical Genomics Workbench, Biomedical Genomics Server Solution, Ingenuity® Variant Analysis™, and HGMD® Human Gene Mutation Database. The new end-to-end solution is rolling out this week at the American Society for Human Genetics (ASHG) Annual Meeting in Baltimore.

“QIAGEN continues to expand our solutions to enable the incredible advances that clinical research labs are making every day, particularly in next-generation sequencing for hereditary diseases,” said Dr. Laura Furmanski, Head of QIAGEN’s Bioinformatics Business Area. “By providing the market’s most comprehensive biomedical content, more than 10 million findings in our QIAGEN Knowledge Base, and the benefits of 16 years of experience in expert curation, we ensure the highest-quality analysis and interpretation – helping customers move from Sample to Insight.”

QIAGEN’s hereditary disease solution addresses the NGS analysis bottleneck by delivering seamless and highly accurate end-to-end workflows for the identification and interpretation of causal variants in hereditary and rare diseases from NGS data. A laboratory using this new hereditary disease solution can achieve a case solve rate as high as 99%, while significantly reducing the rate of irrelevant variants for follow-up by 94% to 100%. These close to perfect solve rates are not possible using any other bioinformatics solution available in the market today, according to the latest benchmarking study that QIAGEN will present at ASHG. The solution is cost-effective and can handle a high volume of samples (for example, 18,000 whole genomes per year). In addition, the QIAGEN Knowledge Base enables collaborative progress for clinical research labs that share information on hereditary diseases in datasets such as the Allele Frequency Community.

“The ability to differentiate between a mutation you might expect to see by chance and a mutation that is potentially disease-causing requires context from as many genomes as possible,” said Dr. Christopher Mason, assistant professor in the Institute for Computational Biomedicine at Weill Cornell Medical College. “With the Allele Frequency Community, you immediately get access to hundreds of collaborators who are sharing this data openly and transparently. It’s a big step forward.”

QIAGEN will be exhibiting the hereditary disease solution during ASHG at booth #1622, demonstrating Biomedical Genomics Workbench, Biomedical Genomics Server Solution, Ingenuity Variant Analysis and HGMD. In addition, several experts are participating in educational sessions and poster presentations. Among them:

October 6, 10:20 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. HGVS (Human Genome Variation Society) meeting, Chesapeake Room, Holiday Inn Baltimore Inner Harbor:

  • “Genome-scale ACMG pathogenicity classification using comprehensive curated clinical evidence and data,” a presentation by Dan Richards, Ph.D., Vice President of Biomedical Informatics, QIAGEN Bioinformatics.

October 7, 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m., Loch Raven room, 2nd floor, Sheraton Inner Harbor Hotel:

  • “Solving Diagnostic Odysseys in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Achieving Valuable Insight from a Single Cell Genome,” a presentation by Benjamin Solomon, MD, Chief, Division of Medical Genomics, Inova Translational Medicine Institute.
  • “NGS Diagnostic Odyssey: From Bench to Bedside,” a presentation by Yuval Itan, Ph.D., of The Rockefeller University. This will be an educational overview of how bioinformatics solutions transform NGS results into actionable hereditary disease insights.

October 8, 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m., Baltimore Convention Center:

  • “Accurate identification and interpretation of variants from Single Cell NGS data using QIAGEN Bioinformatics products”, a presentation by Dr. Anika Joecker, Global Product Manager, QIAGEN Bioinformatics.

October 8, 11:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m., three poster presentations:

  • “An automatic end-to-end solution for disease-causing variant detection in rare and hereditary diseases with a high case solve rate and a much reduced false positive rate,” Anika Joecker, Ph.D., 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm in 1610T, Exhibit Hall, Level 1.
  • “Genomic Crowdsourcing: Allele Frequency Community Provides Expansive, Ethnically Diverse, Freely Available Community Resource for Allele Frequency Annotation,” Dan Richards, Ph.D., 12:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m., in 1592T, Exhibit Hall, Level 1.
  • “Ingenuity Variant Analysis, Leveraging the Knowledge Base and HGMD®, achieves over 30x enrichment in biologically relevant variants from whole genome and exome sequence data from patients with rare disease,” Sohela Shah, Ph.D., 11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. in 1913T, Exhibit Hall, Level 1.

Participants also can visit QIAGEN’s booth #1621, across the aisle from QIAGEN Bioinformatics, to learn about Sample to Insight solutions for exosomes, FFPE, circulating nucleic acids and single cells.

QIAGEN’s integration of Ingenuity Systems, CLC bio and BIOBASE has created the industry-leading provider of integrated bioinformatics solutions and expertly curated content. Find out more about the QIAGEN hereditary disease solution or request a demonstration or a trial of these products here.

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Genome AnalysisGenomics, the study of genomes, includes functional genomics, evolutionary genomics and comparative genomics. There are many genomic technologies such as DNA sequencing of whole genomes, computational biology and bioinformatics. DNA and nucleic acids must be isolated and concentrated from cells for analysis with kits, automated analyzers and software. Other useful technologies for studying genomics include PCR, microarrays and electrophoresis.PCR and Thermal CyclingPolymerase chain reaction (PCR) kits and thermal cyclers are used for the in vitro amplification of DNA permitting subsequent analysis and experimental procedures. Explore a range of high-quality polymerase, primers and nucleotides or simplify your workflow with a PCR mastermix. Find reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) and cDNA synthesis kits for RNA products and libraries. Quantitatively measure the amplification of DNA with real-time PCR (qPCR) and droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) kits and systems, and discover automated PCR setup solutions to increase throughput. Alternative DNA amplification methods also include recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) kits. Find the best PCR kits and thermal cyclers and purification equipment in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Gene Expression and Molecular CloningMolecular cloning is a set of techniques that utilizes vectors to transfer recombinant DNA into host cells and is an essential tool for investigating the expression of genes and proteins in bacterial or mammalian cells. A variety of vectors optimized for gene cloning and expression in a range of host organisms are available, alongside competent cells for genetic replication. Here, you can explore a range of molecular tools, high-quality genomic and cDNA libraries, premade clones, transformation and transfection reagents and mutagenesis or gene expression detection assays and expression arrays. Find the best gene expression and molecular cloning products in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Next Generation SequencingNext-generation sequencing (NGS), also known as whole-genome sequencing, high-throughput sequencing and massive parallel sequencing, produces and analyses thousands to millions of nucleotide sequences at once. Sequencing systems operate via varying technologies depending on the manufacturer, including sequencing by synthesis, ligation, pyrosequencing, ion semiconductor and single-molecule real-time sequencing. For NGS, library preparation is paramount to successful sequencing. In this section, explore a range of library preparation kits, from targeted, amplicon-based or hybridization-based kits including epigenomic, transcriptomic and genomic workflows to fragmentation kits. Find the best next-generation sequencing products in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Chem / BioinformaticsCheminformatics and bioinformatics are computational techniques used in chemistry and biology, respectively, for data acquisition, processing and storage. Cheminformatics focuses on compound information, whereas bioinformatics is mainly applied to analysis and modeling of genomics, genetic and sequencing information. Hardware and software is available for data acquisition, analysis, management and storage.ASHGMutationMutations are changes in the DNA sequence that can lead to diseases, including cancer and genetic disorders. Analyzing mutations is crucial in diagnostics, drug development, and personalized medicine. Explore mutation detection tools in our peer-reviewed product directory; compare products, check reviews, and get pricing directly from manufacturers.Gene ExpressionHigh ThroughputHigh throughput experiments allow the simultaneous processing of several samples. This parallelization reduces the cost per experiment and increases reproducibility and output volume of data.
QIAGEN Launches New Bioinformatics Solution for Hereditary Diseases