| Literature DB >> 29300372 |
Melissa A Kelly1, Colleen Caleshu2, Ana Morales3, Jillian Buchan1, Zena Wolf1, Steven M Harrison1, Stuart Cook4, Mitchell W Dillon1, John Garcia5, Eden Haverfield5, Jan D H Jongbloed6, Daniela Macaya7, Arjun Manrai8, Kate Orland9, Gabriele Richard7, Katherine Spoonamore10, Matthew Thomas11, Kate Thomson12,13, Lisa M Vincent7, Roddy Walsh4,14, Hugh Watkins13, Nicola Whiffin4,14, Jodie Ingles15, J Peter van Tintelen16, Christopher Semsarian15, James S Ware4,14, Ray Hershberger3, Birgit Funke1,17,18.
Abstract
PurposeIntegrating genomic sequencing in clinical care requires standardization of variant interpretation practices. The Clinical Genome Resource has established expert panels to adapt the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology classification framework for specific genes and diseases. The Cardiomyopathy Expert Panel selected MYH7, a key contributor to inherited cardiomyopathies, as a pilot gene to develop a broadly applicable approach.MethodsExpert revisions were tested with 60 variants using a structured double review by pairs of clinical and diagnostic laboratory experts. Final consensus rules were established via iterative discussions.ResultsAdjustments represented disease-/gene-informed specifications (12) or strength adjustments of existing rules (5). Nine rules were deemed not applicable. Key specifications included quantitative frameworks for minor allele frequency thresholds, the use of segregation data, and a semiquantitative approach to counting multiple independent variant occurrences where fully controlled case-control studies are lacking. Initial inter-expert classification concordance was 93%. Internal data from participating diagnostic laboratories changed the classification of 20% of the variants (n = 12), highlighting the critical importance of data sharing.ConclusionThese adapted rules provide increased specificity for use in MYH7-associated disorders in combination with expert review and clinical judgment and serve as a stepping stone for genes and disorders with similar genetic and clinical characteristics.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29300372 PMCID: PMC5876064 DOI: 10.1038/gim.2017.218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Figure 1Summary of ClinGen Inherited Cardiomyopathy Expert Panel (CMP-EP) involvement. Phase 1: Disease/gene and other specifications made to established American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG/AMP) framework. Phase 2: Selection and review of 60 pilot variants by two independent reviewers. Classifications were then compared and discussed to resolve any conflicts. Phase 3: Additional adjustments to variant classifications. Final: Expert panel variant classifications submitted to ClinVar for public accessibility. Expert panel ratings in ClinVar are denoted with a three-star rating.
Summary of the adapted ACMG/AMP pathogenic and benign criteria
| VS | PVS1 | Removed | Null variant in gene with established LOF as disease mechanism |
| Strong | PS1 | No change | Different nucleotide change (same amino acid) as a previously established pathogenic variant |
| PS2 | Disease/gene | De novo (paternity confirmed) in a patient with disease and no family history | |
| PS3 | Disease/gene | Functional studies of mammalian knock-in models supportive of a damaging effect on the gene or gene product | |
| PS4 | Disease/gene | Prevalence of the variant in affected individuals is significantly increased compared with the prevalence in controls - OR - Variant identified in ≥15 probands with consistent phenotypes | |
| PP1_Strong | Modif. strength | Variant segregates with ≥7 meioses | |
| Moderate | PM1 | Disease/gene | Hotspot/est. functional domain (amino acids 181–937) without benign variation |
| PM2 | Disease/gene | Absent/extremely rare (<0.004%) from large population studies | |
| PM3 | Removed | Detected in | |
| PM4 | No change | Protein length changes due to in-frame deletions/insertions of any size in a nonrepeat region or stop-loss variants | |
| PM5 | No change | Missense change at an amino acid residue where a different missense change previously established as pathogenic | |
| PM6 | Disease/gene | Confirmed de novo without confirmation of paternity | |
| PVS1_Moderate | Modif. strength | Null variant in gene with evidence supporting LOF as disease mechanism | |
| PS4_Moderate | Modif. strength | Variant identified in ≥6 probands with consistent phenotypes | |
| PP1_Moderate | Modif. strength | Variant segregates in ≥5 meioses | |
| Supporting | PP1 | Disease/gene | Variant segregates in ≥3 meioses |
| PP2 | Removed | Missense variant in a gene that has a low rate of benign missense variation and where missense variants are a common mechanism of disease | |
| PP3 | No change | Multiple lines of computational evidence support a deleterious effect on the gene or gene product | |
| PP4 | Removed | Phenotype specific for disease with single genetic etiology | |
| PP5 | Removed | Reputable source reports as pathogenic | |
| PS4_Supporting | Modif. strength | Variant identified in ≥2 probands with consistent phenotypes | |
| SA | BA1 | Disease/gene | Allele frequency is ≥0.1% based on the filtering allele frequency in ExAC |
| Strong | BS1 | Disease/gene | Allele frequency is ≥0.02% based on the filtering allele frequency in ExAC provided there is no conflicting information |
| BS2 | Removed | Observed in healthy adult with full penetrance expected at an early age | |
| BS3 | No change | Functional studies of mammalian knock-in models supportive of no damaging effect on protein function or splicing | |
| BS4 | Disease/gene | Nonsegregation in affected members of a family | |
| Supporting | BP1 | Removed | Missense variant in gene where only LOF causes disease |
| BP2 | Disease/gene | Observed as comp het (in | |
| BP3 | Removed | In-frame deletions/insertions in a repetitive region without a known function | |
| BP4 | No change | Multiple lines of computational evidence suggest no impact on gene or gene product | |
| BP5 | Disease/gene | Variant found in a case with an alternate molecular basis for disease | |
| BP6 | Removed | Reputable source reports as benign | |
| BP7 | No change | A silent variant for which splicing prediction algorithms predict no impact to the splice consensus sequence nor the creation of a new splice site -AND- the nucleotide is not highly conserved | |
ACMG/AMP, American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology; LOF, loss of function; Modif. strength, modified rule strength; Removed, not applicable to MYH7-associated disease; SA, standalone; VS, very strong.
Numbers under each classification refer to the number of rules with that strength required to classify the variant as its header category. Example: a likely pathogenic classification may be made with one piece of strong and two pieces of supporting evidence.
Figure 2Derivation of allele frequency thresholds for rules BA1 and BS1. Disease prevalence = 1/200 individuals (1/400 chromosomes). Penetrance = 30%. % gene contribution = 10.6%. % maximum pathogenic variant contribution (max path. variant) = 2%.
Figure 3Impact of data sharing on proband counts. Increased proband counts obtained from internal lab data changed the variant classification for eight variants. Hashed lines correspond to the thresholds for supporting (≥2, PS4_Supporting), moderate (≥6, PS4_Moderate), and strong (≥15, PS4). Publicly available data was collected from PubMed, Google, Human Gene Mutation Database Professional, ClinVar, and relevant locus-specific variant databases. Internal laboratory data was collected from the Partners HealthCare Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, Invitae, the Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry (https://theshareregistry.org/), the Australian Genetic Heart Disease Registry (http://www.heartregistry.org.au/), the National Institute for Health Research Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit at Royal Brompton Hospital and Imperial College London, and the National Heart Centre Singapore.