Dr. Himanshu Goel utilized FDNA’s Artificial intelligence that instantaneously matches rare disease patients’ photos with other patients’ photos around the world to allow even the rarest of genetic diseases to be identified.

 

Dr. Himanshu Goel, a clinical geneticist in Newcastle, Australia, used the help of Face2Gene photo-based GestaltMatcher technology to diagnose a 26-year-old patient with the Chromosome 17q21.31 Duplication Syndrome –  the first ultra-rare syndrome case diagnosed with FDNA’s proprietary AI Technology.

Like most ultra-rare conditions, Chromosome 17q21.31 Duplication Syndrome requires a lengthy genotype/phenotype correlation analysis before it can be diagnosed. FDNA’s innovative photo-based AI was able to support Dr. Goel in making the diagnosis in quick time, although very few photos of diagnosed reference patients are available.

“My patient has development delay and autism and he lived most of his life in foster care. While living in an apartment in the care of the state, he met his now wife and they are thinking about starting a family”, says Dr. Goel. “He came to me in search of a diagnosis for his condition to understand the chances of his child having the same condition as he had”.

As part of this investigation, a chromosome array as well as other biochemical studies and metabolic screening were ordered. The tests found out that he had a duplication in chromosome 17q21.31. “I put his photo on Face2Gene – and when I clicked on the ULTRA-RARE tab, I was very surprised to learn it matched a recognized syndrome that is actually named Chromosome 17q21.31 Duplication Syndrome – and it matched with 2 patients on its database”.

Dr. Goel continues that seeing the patient’s photo matched in Face2Gene gave him more confidence that it was recognizable syndrome. “My patient now knows what the chances of that his child to inherit his condition and that boys and girls are equally affected”.

GestaltMatcher is a deep learning technology that matches rare disease patients’ photos with other patients’ photos around the world instantaneously, thus, potentially helping to accelerate the clinical diagnosis by medical professionals of patients with ultra-rare disorders as well as enable the definition of new syndromes. The proprietary technology strengthens next-generation phenotyping (NGP) — the capture, structuring, and analysis of complex human physiological data — by allowing medical professionals to identify hundreds of additional disorders just with facial analysis.

Face2Gene already uses its DeepGestalt technology – an algorithm that processes an input image into facial regions. Each region is fed into a Deep Convolutional Neural Network to obtain a softmax vector indicating its correspondence to each syndrome in the model.

Dr. Karen Gripp, CMO at FDNA, explains that this is a very powerful tool, however it has its limitations: “for every rare syndrome to be of use, the system must be trained for this syndrome. For this training, several diagnosed patients’ photos must be available – something that is often not possible when we are dealing with ultra-rare syndromes”.

To mitigate this limitation, Face2Gene developed the GestaltMatcher technology: patient photos are matched to a molecular diagnosis even when the disorder was not part of the training set. The output is displayed in two parallel lists, the first one ranks with the matched patients, and the second one ranks with the syndromes of these matched patients. This technology is now available on Face2Gene CLINIC’s ULTRA-RARE tab and can help doctors to achieve a diagnosis even when there are only a handful of diagnosed patients’ data on the system.

“Having a diagnosis is very important – my patient can now connect with other patients around the world and see how they are managing; we can learn more about the causes of his symptoms and start a proper treatment. He and his wife can analyze all possible scenarios and if, as a couple, they decide it is not a big problem for them to manage, they can have a child, and if he or she has the same duplication an early intervention can be targeted” explain Dr. Himanshu Goel.

Find out more about Face2Gene’s GestaltMatcher Technology

FDNA’s breakthrough study findings were published in the esteemed peer-reviewed journal Nature Genetics, in a paper titled “GestaltMatcher facilitates rare disease matching using facial phenotype descriptors.”

Face2Gene User Community Includes Users From:

  • Using Face2Gene to reference all my department’s cases, share information with my colleagues and quickly look up relevant information in the London Medical Databases Online saves me hours of work every week and allows me to focus on my patients.

    Dr. Ibrahim Akalin

    Assoc. Prof. Ibrahim Akalin, MD, Medical Geneticist from the Istanbul Medeniyet University, Istanbul, Turkey

  • FDNA’s game-changing technology introduces an objective computer-aided dimension to the “art of dysmorphology”, transforming the analysis into an evidence-based science.

    Dr. Michael R. Hayden

    Chairman of FDNA’s Scientific Advisory Board & Steering Committee and Editor in Chief of Clinical Genetics

  • FDNA is developing technology that has the potential to help so many physicians and families by bringing them closer to a diagnosis- there are literally millions of individuals with unusual features around the world that lack a diagnosis and therefore lack information on natural history, recurrence risk and prevention of known complications.

    Dr. Judith G. Hall

    Professor Emerita of Pediatrics & Medical Genetics UBC & Children's and Women's Health Centre of BC

  • FDNA has been “right on the money”, providing me with relevant, accurate and insightful information for differential diagnoses.

    Dr. Cynthia J.R. Curry

    Professor of Pediatrics UCSF, Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics Stanford

  • I am excited to be a part of the FDNA community, promoting broad information sharing with my peers to amplify the scientific and clinical value of our community’s accumulated knowledge for the purpose of efficiently diagnosing individuals with rare genetic disorders.

    Dr. Karen W. Gripp

    Chief, Division of Medical Genetics A.I. duPont Hospital for Children

  • FDNA's idea of incorporating several dysmorphology resources (OMIM, GeneReviews), supported by their visual analytic technology, will be able to improve researching of genetic syndromes - all within a single mobile app.

    Dr. Chad Haldeman-Englert

    Assistant Professor Pediatrics at Mission Fullerton Genetics

  • Given the advancement of visual analytical technology, it’s about time Dysmorphology is supported with computational capabilities and moving this to mobile support, is simply the next logical step.

    Dr. Chanika Phornphutkul

    Associate Professor of Pediatrics Director, Division of Human Genetics Department of Pediatrics Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University

  • Having an archive of cases easily accessible from my mobile device anytime and anywhere is a long-time unmet need.

    Dr. Lynne Bird

    Rady Children's Specialists of San Diego

  • FDNA's solution is a huge leap forward for dysmorphology. It saves me significant time when I’m evaluating patients in my clinic and provides me with insightful tools that help me generate a differential diagnosis.

    Dr. David A. Chitayat

    Head of the Prenatal Diagnosis and Medical Genetics Program at Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto

  • Shortly after learning about Face2Gene, I’ve started to incorporate this amazing tool into my workflow. Soon enough, Face2Gene’s analysis flushed out references that I would not have considered for several of my patients, which turned out to be their correct diagnosis

    Dr. Zvi U. Borochowitz

    Chairman (Retired) of The Simon Winter Institute for Human Genetics at Bnai-Zion Medical Center, Technion-Rappaport Faculty of Medicine

  • The Unknown Forum from Face2Gene is a great community platform for exchanging opinions regarding undiagnosed cases. It is straightforward to use and safe for exchange of medical data, thanks to the efforts of its developers and to the involvement of geneticists worldwide.

    Dr. Oana Moldovan

    Clinical Geneticist at the Hospital Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisbon, Portugal