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Actionable exomic incidental findings in 6503 participants: challenges of variant classification.

Authors :
Amendola LM
Dorschner MO
Robertson PD
Salama JS
Hart R
Shirts BH
Murray ML
Tokita MJ
Gallego CJ
Kim DS
Bennett JT
Crosslin DR
Ranchalis J
Jones KL
Rosenthal EA
Jarvik ER
Itsara A
Turner EH
Herman DS
Schleit J
Burt A
Jamal SM
Abrudan JL
Johnson AD
Conlin LK
Dulik MC
Santani A
Metterville DR
Kelly M
Foreman AK
Lee K
Taylor KD
Guo X
Crooks K
Kiedrowski LA
Raffel LJ
Gordon O
Machini K
Desnick RJ
Biesecker LG
Lubitz SA
Mulchandani S
Cooper GM
Joffe S
Richards CS
Yang Y
Rotter JI
Rich SS
O'Donnell CJ
Berg JS
Spinner NB
Evans JP
Fullerton SM
Leppig KA
Bennett RL
Bird T
Sybert VP
Grady WM
Tabor HK
Kim JH
Bamshad MJ
Wilfond B
Motulsky AG
Scott CR
Pritchard CC
Walsh TD
Burke W
Raskind WH
Byers P
Hisama FM
Rehm H
Nickerson DA
Jarvik GP
Source :
Genome research [Genome Res] 2015 Mar; Vol. 25 (3), pp. 305-15. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Jan 30.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Recommendations for laboratories to report incidental findings from genomic tests have stimulated interest in such results. In order to investigate the criteria and processes for assigning the pathogenicity of specific variants and to estimate the frequency of such incidental findings in patients of European and African ancestry, we classified potentially actionable pathogenic single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) in all 4300 European- and 2203 African-ancestry participants sequenced by the NHLBI Exome Sequencing Project (ESP). We considered 112 gene-disease pairs selected by an expert panel as associated with medically actionable genetic disorders that may be undiagnosed in adults. The resulting classifications were compared to classifications from other clinical and research genetic testing laboratories, as well as with in silico pathogenicity scores. Among European-ancestry participants, 30 of 4300 (0.7%) had a pathogenic SNV and six (0.1%) had a disruptive variant that was expected to be pathogenic, whereas 52 (1.2%) had likely pathogenic SNVs. For African-ancestry participants, six of 2203 (0.3%) had a pathogenic SNV and six (0.3%) had an expected pathogenic disruptive variant, whereas 13 (0.6%) had likely pathogenic SNVs. Genomic Evolutionary Rate Profiling mammalian conservation score and the Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion summary score of conservation, substitution, regulation, and other evidence were compared across pathogenicity assignments and appear to have utility in variant classification. This work provides a refined estimate of the burden of adult onset, medically actionable incidental findings expected from exome sequencing, highlights challenges in variant classification, and demonstrates the need for a better curated variant interpretation knowledge base.<br /> (© 2015 Amendola et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1549-5469
Volume :
25
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Genome research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25637381
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.183483.114