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Harmonizing the Collection of Clinical Data on Genetic Testing Requisition Forms to Enhance Variant Interpretation in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM)

Authors :
Carolyn Y. Ho
John Garcia
Tami Johnston
Joseph Maleszewski
Alexander Ing
Matteo Vatta
Ray E. Hershberger
Lucas Bronicki
James S. Ware
Arjun K. Manrai
Jodie Ingles
Cardiomyopathy Variant Curation Expert Panel
Gabriele Richard
Olga Jarinova
Lisa Mahanta
Melissa A. Kelly
Tom Winder
Birgit Funke
Christopher Semsarian
K Thomson
Matthew S. Lebo
Allison L. Cirino
Michael Fietz
Mitzi L. Murray
Christina Austin-Tse
Christian Antolik
C. Lisa Kurtz
Linnea M. Baudhuin
Ana Morales
Daniela Macaya
Megan H. Hawley
Source :
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics : JMD
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Investigative Pathology, 2021.

Abstract

Diagnostic laboratories gather phenotypic data through requisition forms, but there is no consensus as to which data are essential for variant interpretation. The ClinGen Cardiomyopathy Variant Curation Expert Panel defined a phenotypic data set for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) variant interpretation, with the goal of standardizing requisition forms. Phenotypic data elements listed on requisition forms from nine leading cardiomyopathy testing laboratories were compiled to assess divergence in data collection. A pilot of 50 HCM cases was implemented to determine the feasibility of harmonizing data collection. Laboratory directors were surveyed to gauge potential for adoption of a minimal data set. Wide divergence was observed in the phenotypic data fields in requisition forms. The 50-case pilot showed that although demographics and assertion of a clinical diagnosis of HCM had 86% to 98% completion, specific phenotypic features, such as degree of left ventricular hypertrophy, ejection fraction, and suspected syndromic disease, were completed only 24% to 44% of the time. Nine data elements were deemed essential for variant classification by the expert panel. Participating laboratories unanimously expressed a willingness to adopt these data elements in their requisition forms. This study demonstrates the value of comparing and sharing best practices through an expert group, such as the ClinGen Program, to enhance variant interpretation, providing a foundation for leveraging cumulative case-level data in public databases and ultimately improving patient care.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19437811 and 15251578
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics : JMD
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8320282c0dfc25e4e473d50876f07672