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Calibration of computational tools for missense variant pathogenicity classification and ClinGen recommendations for PP3/BP4 criteria

Authors :
Vikas Pejaver
Alicia B. Byrne
Bing-Jian Feng
Kymberleigh A. Pagel
Sean D. Mooney
Rachel Karchin
Anne O’Donnell-Luria
Steven M. Harrison
Sean V. Tavtigian
Marc S. Greenblatt
Leslie G. Biesecker
Predrag Radivojac
Steven E. Brenner
Ahmad A. Tayoun
Jonathan S. Berg
Garry R. Cutting
Sian Ellard
Peter Kang
Izabela Karbassi
Jessica Mester
Tina Pesaran
Sharon E. Plon
Heidi L. Rehm
Natasha T. Strande
Scott Topper
Source :
The American Journal of Human Genetics. 109:2163-2177
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Recommendations from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and the Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG/AMP) for interpreting sequence variants specify the use of computational predictors as "supporting" level of evidence for pathogenicity or benignity using criteria PP3 and BP4, respectively. However, score intervals defined by tool developers, and ACMG/AMP recommendations that require the consensus of multiple predictors, lack quantitative support. Previously, we described a probabilistic framework that quantified the strengths of evidence (supporting, moderate, strong, very strong) within ACMG/AMP recommendations. We have extended this framework to computational predictors and introduce a new standard that converts a tool's scores to PP3 and BP4 evidence strengths. Our approach is based on estimating the local positive predictive value and can calibrate any computational tool or other continuous-scale evidence on any variant type. We estimate thresholds (score intervals) corresponding to each strength of evidence for pathogenicity and benignity for thirteen missense variant interpretation tools, using carefully assembled independent data sets. Most tools achieved supporting evidence level for both pathogenic and benign classification using newly established thresholds. Multiple tools reached score thresholds justifying moderate and several reached strong evidence levels. One tool reached very strong evidence level for benign classification on some variants. Based on these findings, we provide recommendations for evidence-based revisions of the PP3 and BP4 ACMG/AMP criteria using individual tools and future assessment of computational methods for clinical interpretation.

Details

ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
109
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63d921f44375e47e5baccb6ef134edc1