| Literature DB >> 33208383 |
Alice Garrett1, Miranda Durkie2, Alison Callaway3,4, George J Burghel5, Rachel Robinson6, James Drummond7, Bethany Torr1, Cankut Cubuk1, Ian R Berry6, Andrew J Wallace5, Sian Ellard8, Diana M Eccles9, Marc Tischkowitz10, Helen Hanson11, Clare Turnbull12,13.
Abstract
Accurate classification of variants in cancer susceptibility genes (CSGs) is key for correct estimation of cancer risk and management of patients. Consistency in the weighting assigned to individual elements of evidence has been much improved by the American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) 2015 framework for variant classification, UK Association for Clinical Genomic Science (UK-ACGS) Best Practice Guidelines and subsequent Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK (CanVIG-UK) consensus specification for CSGs. However, considerable inconsistency persists regarding practice in the combination of evidence elements. CanVIG-UK is a national subspecialist multidisciplinary network for cancer susceptibility genomic variant interpretation, comprising clinical scientist and clinical geneticist representation from each of the 25 diagnostic laboratories/clinical genetic units across the UK and Republic of Ireland. Here, we summarise the aggregated evidence elements and combinations possible within different variant classification schemata currently employed for CSGs (ACMG, UK-ACGS, CanVIG-UK and ClinGen gene-specific guidance for PTEN, TP53 and CDH1). We present consensus recommendations from CanVIG-UK regarding (1) consistent scoring for combinations of evidence elements using a validated numerical 'exponent score' (2) new combinations of evidence elements constituting likely pathogenic' and 'pathogenic' classification categories, (3) which evidence elements can and cannot be used in combination for specific variant types and (4) classification of variants for which there are evidence elements for both pathogenicity and benignity. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: genetic testing; genetic variation; genetics; genomics; medical
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33208383 PMCID: PMC8086256 DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2020-107248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Genet ISSN: 0022-2593 Impact factor: 5.941
Probability calculations for attaining (A) evidence elements and (B) classification categories
| (A) | |||
| Evidence strength | Odds of pathogenicity | Exponent score | |
| Very Strong (VS) | 350 | 2.088 | 8 |
| Strong (S) | 18.7 | 2.084 | 4 |
| Moderate (M) | 4.33 | 2.082 | 2 |
| Supporting (P) | 2.08 | 2.081 | 1 |
*The posterior probability attained with an exponent sum of −6 has been rounded down to 0.001, consistent with the UK Association for Clinical Genomic Science Best Practice Guidelines for Variant Classification in Rare Disease 2020.4
Five strengths of variant of uncertain significance, annotated by potential evidence combinations, posterior probability of pathogenicity, ‘exponent sum’ and UK-ACGS Best Practice Guidelines for Variant Classification in Rare Disease descriptor4
| Exponent score for evidence elements | Exponent sum | Overall (posterior) probability of pathogenicity (%) | UK-ACGS descriptor |
| Towards pathogenicity: 8 (very strong), | |||
| 4+1 | 5 | 0.812 (81.2) | Hot VUS |
| 2+2+1 | |||
| 2+1+1+1 | |||
| 1+1+1+1+1 | |||
| 4 | 4 | 0.675 (67.5) | Warm VUS |
| 2+2 | |||
| 2+1+1 | |||
| 1+1+1+1 | |||
| 2+1 | 3 | 0.500 (50.0) | Tepid VUS |
| 1+1+1 | |||
| 2 | 2 | 0.325 (32.5) | Cool VUS |
| 1+1 | |||
| 1 | 1 | 0.188 (18.8) | Ice-cold VUS |
UK-ACGS, UK Association for Clinical Genomic Science; VUS, variant of uncertain significance.
Total evidence elements included within current versions of ACMG-based specifications used by CanVIG-UK for CSG variant interpretation
| Specification | Evidence for pathogenicity | Evidence for benignity | Total | |||||
| Very strong | Strong | Moderate | Supporting | Supporting | Strong | Stand-alone | ||
| ACMG framework 2015 | 1 | 5 | 7 | 5 | 7 | 4 | 1 | 30 |
| UK-ACGS rare disease specification 2020 | 4 | 10 | 13 | 15 | 7 | 4 | 1 | 54 |
| CanVIG-UK specification 2020 | 5 | 9 | 13 | 15 | 9 | 5 | 1 | 57 |
| ClinGen CDH1 specification V2 | 4 | 7 | 7 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 2 | 34 |
| ClinGen PTEN specification V2 | 4 | 6 | 7 | 5 | 8 | 4 | 1 | 35 |
| ClinGen TP53 specification V1 | 3 | 7 | 10 | 7 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 37 |
ACMG, American College of Medical Genetics; CanVIG-UK, Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK; CSG, cancer susceptibility gene; UK-ACGS, UK Association for Clinical Genomic Science.
Permissible and non-permissible combinations of concordant evidence elements (CanVIG-UK consensus)
| Theme | Evidence elements | CanVIG consensus | Notes, references |
| In silico + functional data | PS3 (functional) and PP3 (in silico) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted for assays of protein function |
| BS3 (functional) and BP4 (in silico) | ✔ | ||
| PM1 (hot spot) and PP3 (in silico) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted; regional enrichment and in silico prediction largely different evidence types (and evidence from three tools generally incorporated) | |
| In silico + variant mechanism | BP4 (in silico) and BP7 (silent variant) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted for synonymous and intronic variants (splicing effect must be excluded) |
| PVS1 (null variant) and PP3 (in silico) |
| Co-usage not permitted; in silico predictors often incorporate variant mechanism. The strongest legitimate evidence item should be selected for inclusion. | |
| PM4 (protein length changes) and PP3 (in silico) |
| ||
| BP3 (in-frame del/ins) & BP4 (in silico) |
| ||
| Use of population data | PS4 (case control) and PM2 (absence in controls) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted, provided that |
| Phenotypic specificity | PS4 (case control) and PP4 (phenotype specificity) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted, provided that there is a schema predefining distinct data types used for each, thus preventing ‘double counting’ of phenotypic features (eg PP4 is applied for molecular/tumour assay data, indicating specificity at gene level); PS4 is applied at patient level, counting the strength of features in cases and the number of cases/families |
| Scaled evidence items | PS2 (de novo confirmed) and PM6 (de novo not confirmed) |
| Co-usage not permitted; either PS2 or PM6 is used, depending on aggregate observations of de novo occurrence (ClinGen Sequence Variant Interpretation Working Group) |
| Overlapping/ related evidence | PS1 (same amino acid) and PM5 (same residue) |
| Co-usage not permitted; the strongest legitimate evidence item should be selected for inclusion |
| PM1 (hot spot) and PP2 (low missense rate) | ✔ | Co-usage permitted; there may be both a low rate of benign missense variation at a whole gene/gene region level and a specific mutational hot spot/functional domain | |
| PVS1 (null variant) and PM4 (protein length changes) |
| Co-usage not permitted; this is double counting of two end points of deleterious effect | |
| PVS1 (null variant) and PS3 (functional) | ✔ | Co-usage not permitted for canonical splice variants or non-canonical splice variants (experimental evidence cannot be scored using PS3 if PVS1 is used) | |
| PS1 (same amino acid) and PM1 (hot spot) | ✔* | Co-usage permitted; definition of a hot spot is predicated on multiple well-documented pre-existing pathogenic variants. This may include those at the same amino acid | |
| PM5 (same residue) and PM1 (hot spot) | ✔* | ||
| Alternative explanation for phenotype | BP2 (observed with pathogenic variant) and BP5 (alternative cause) |
| Co-usage not permitted; These evidence elements both pertain to presence of an alternative genetic cause (BP2 in the same gene and BP5 in a different gene) |
*PM1 should therefore be used at supporting level if used in combination with PS1 or PM5.15
ACGS, Association for Clinical Genomic Science; CanVIG-UK, Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK.
Maximum number of evidence elements attainable by variant type using the CanVIG-UK specification
| Variant type | Maximum number of pieces of evidence at each strength | ||||||
| Pathogenicity | Benignity | ||||||
| Very strong | Strong | Moderate | Supporting | Supporting | Strong | Standalone | |
| Truncating | 4 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 4 | 5 | 1 |
| Missense | 3 | 7 | 9 | 12 | 6 | 5 | 1 |
| In-frame indel | 3 | 6 | 9 | 10 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
| Synonymous | 3 | 6 | 7 | 9 | 6 | 5 | 1 |
PP5 and BP6 (reputable source) are permitted by the CanVIG-UK specification 2020 at supporting level and so are included in the totals above, despite not being permitted by Brnich et al 19
CanVIG-UK, Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK.
New and existing combinations of exponent scores potentially leading to overall CanVIG-UK variant classifications
| 2015 ACMG framework assignation of variant class | Exponent score of evidence elements | Exponent sum | CanVIG-UK assignation of variant class |
| Towards pathogenicity: 8 (very strong), 4 (strong), 2 (moderate), 1 (supporting); towards benignity: −4 (strong), −1 (supporting) | |||
| Pathogenic (ia) | 8+4 | 12 | Pathogenic (ia) |
| Pathogenic (ib) | 8+2+2 | 12 | Pathogenic (ib) |
| Pathogenic (ic) | 8+2+1 | 11 | Pathogenic (ic) |
| Pathogenic (id) | 8+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (id) |
| L/pathogenic (i) | 8+2 | 10 | Pathogenic (ie) |
| Pathogenic (iiia) | 4+2+2+2 | 10 | Pathogenic (iia) |
| Pathogenic (iiib) | 4+2+2+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (iib) |
| Pathogenic (iiic) | 4+2+1+1+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (iic) |
| Not included | 4+4+2 | 10 | Pathogenic (iiia) |
| Not included | 4+4+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (iiib) |
| Not included | 2+2+2+2+2 | 10 | Pathogenic (iv) |
| Not included | 2+2+2+2+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (v) |
| Not included | 2+2+2+1+1+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (vi) |
| Not included | 2+2+1+1+1+1+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (vii) |
| Not included | 2+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (viii) |
| Not included | 1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1 | 10 | Pathogenic (viii) |
| Pathogenic (ii) | 4+4 | 8 | L/pathogenic (v) |
| L/pathogenic (ii) | 4+2 | 6 | L/pathogenic (i) |
| L/pathogenic (iii) | 4+1+1 | 6 | L/pathogenic (ii) |
| L/pathogenic (iv) | 2+2+2 | 6 | L/pathogenic (iii) |
| L/pathogenic (v) | 2+2+1+1 | 6 | L/pathogenic (iv) |
| L/pathogenic (vi) | 2+1+1+1+1 | 6 | L/pathogenic (vi) |
| Not included | 8+1 | 9 | L/pathogenic (vii) |
| Not included | 8 | 8 | N/A: single evidence element |
| Not included | 1+1+1+1+1+1 | 6 | L/pathogenic (viii) |
| L/benign (i) | (−1)+(−4) | -5 | L/benign (i) |
| L/benign (ii) | (−1)+(−1) | -2 | L/benign (ii) |
| Not included | (−1) | -1 | N/A: single evidence element |
| Not included | (−4) | -4 | N/A: single evidence element |
| Benign (i) | (−4)+(−4) | -8 | Benign (i) |
Classifications in dark grey are those present in the 2015 ACMG framework that are inconsistent with the Tavtigian Bayesian metastructure, and those in light grey are new combinations generated using the exponent scoring system.
ACGS, Association for Clinical Genomic Science; ACMG, American College of Medical Genetics; CanVIG-UK, Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK; L, likely; N/A, not applicable.
Examples of potential combinations of conflicting evidence and the resultant CanVIG-UK classification that would be given
| Evidence elements for pathogenicity | Evidence elements for benignity | Net exponent score | CanVIG-UK assignation of variant class |
| Towards pathogenicity: 8 (very strong), 4 (strong), 2 (moderate), 1 (supporting); | |||
| 8+4 | (−1) | 11 | Likely pathogenic |
| 8+4 | (−1)+(−1) | 10 | VUS |
| 8+4 | (−4) | 8 | VUS |
| 4+4 | (−1) | 7 | Likely pathogenic |
| 4+4+1 | (−1)+(−1) | 7 | VUS |
| 1 | (−4) | -3 | Likely benign |
| 1+1 | (−4)+(−4) | -6 | VUS |
CanVIG-UK, Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK; VUS, Variant of Uncertain Significance.