I've been regularly asked to analyse a set of BAM/VCF related to some genetic diseases.
The studied phenotypes are now more and more complicated (e.g: multigenic, not a non-synonymous mutation, etc... ) and I've got the feeling that the good results are more scarce (depressing).
Is there a resource that would highlight the number of NGS projects vs the number of articles published ?
Thank you,
Pierre
What do you even mean by successful? If a sequencing project gives a lab 10 candidate genes, that can be a huge success, whether it's published or not. Sure, it might take a decade to work out the details of which gene is causative, and another decade to develop treatments, but giving wet-lab folks a narrowly focused place to start can be invaluable.
Are you specifically asking about NGS projects aiming at detecting genomic variants related to some disease (basically GWAS-type)? I work on several (successful) projects that include NGS (genomics, transcriptomics, ...), so I think your question's title is misleading.
If you could get data on library prep kits ordered or lanes sequenced and then compare that to papers published somehow, I think it would paint quite a disappointing picture...
Getting data on a widespread scale might be harder, but maybe for a single institution it would be possible.
As a colleague has been known to say "Science is hard."