| Literature DB >> 33981013 |
Gunnar Houge1, Andreas Laner2, Sebahattin Cirak3, Nicole de Leeuw4, Hans Scheffer4, Johan T den Dunnen5.
Abstract
The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and the Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG-AMP) system for variant classification is score based with five classes: benign, likely benign, variant of unknown significance (VUS), likely pathogenic, and pathogenic. Here, we present a variant classification model that can be an add-on or alternative to ACMG classification: A stepwise system that can classify any type of genetic variant (e.g., hypomorphic alleles, imprinted alleles, copy number variants, runs of homozygosity, enhancer variants, and variants related to traits). We call it the ABC system because classification is first functional (A), then clinical (B), and optionally a standard comment that fits the clinical question is selected (C). Both steps A and B have 1-5 grading when knowledge is sufficient, if not, class "zero" is assigned. Functional grading (A) only concerns biological consequences with the stages normal function (1), likely normal function (2), hypothetical functional effect (3), likely functional effect (4), and proven functional effect (5). Clinical grading (B) is genotype-phenotype focused with the stages "right type of gene" (1), risk factor (2), and pathogenic (3-5, depending on penetrance). Both grades are listed for each variant and combined to generate a joint class ranging from A to F. Importantly, the A-F classes are linked to standard comments, reflecting laboratory or national policy. In step A, the VUS class is split into class 0 (true unknown) and class 3 (hypothetical functional effect based on molecular predictions or de novo occurrence), providing a rationale for variant-of-interest reporting when the clinical picture could fit the finding. The system gives clinicians a better guide to variant significance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33981013 PMCID: PMC8821602 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00903-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Fig. 1Graphical illustration of step A and B grading.
The two scoring steps are functional (a) and clinical (b). Step A can be viewed as a likelihood scale from normal function to abnormal or no function, the balance being between fVUS and HFE. Step B grades from unknown clinical relevance (cVUS) to pathogenic with high penetrance, “risk” comprising both know risk factor genes and variants of interest (VOI).
Step A: functional grading.
| Functional classes | Score | ~Odds | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| fVUS | Variant of unknown functional significance— | 0 | Variant of unknown | |
| NF | Normal function (NF) | 1 | <1% | High-frequency variant with no reason to suspect a recessive or hypomorphic role |
| LNF | Likely normal function (LNF) | 2 | 1–10% | Moderate-frequency variant with no reason to suspect a recessive or hypomorphic role |
| HFE | Hypothetical functional effect (HFE) | 3 | 50–90% | Rare variant that could affect gene function based on biological knowledge and bioinformatic tools |
| LFE | Likely functional effect (LFE), or | 4 | 90–99% | |
| FE | Functional effect (FE) | 5 | >99% | Variant that disrupt gene function (certain LoF) or known to be disease causing (known GoF or dominant-negative effect) |
Step B: clinical grading.
| Clinical classes | Score | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| cVUS | Variant of unknown clinical significance— | Variant of unknown | |
| Right type of gene | Variant of potential interest (VOI) | “The right type of gene” (1) dominant variant that could be pathogenic (2) single hypomorphic variant that could be linked to a recessive cause | |
| Risk factor | Known or assumed risk factor variant | (1) Low penetrance dominant variant (2) Dominant variant with good clinical support of a pathogenic role (3) Single pathogenic variant in a recessive gene that fits the phenotype | |
| Pathogenic | Pathogenic variant | Pathogenic variant | |
| Pathogenic | Moderate penetrance pathogenic variant | Dominant pathogenic variant of moderate (20–40%) penetrance | |
| Pathogenic | High penetrance pathogenic variant | Dominant pathogenic variant of high (>40%) penetrance |
Combined class based on functional (A) and clinical (B) grading.
| A + B class | Grading combinations | Group | Examples of reporting recommendations (policy dependent) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Functional grade 0–2 | 0–2 | Not reported—clinical grading unnecessary |
| F | Functional 3 + clinical 0 | 3 | Not reported if the gene in question is unlikely to be related to the phenotype |
| E | 3 + 1/3 + 2/4 + 0/4 + 1/5 + 0 | 4–5 | |
| D | 3 + 3/4 + 2/4 + 3/5 + 1/5 + 2 | 6–7 | |
| C | 4 + 4/5 + 3 | 8 | |
| B | 4 + 5/5 + 4 | 9 | |
| A | 5 + 5 | 10 | Pathogenic: disease-associated variant of high penetrance |
| X | Functional 3–5 + clinical 2–5 | Secondary finding/incidental finding/opportunistic finding |
Step C: selection of standard variant comment based on combined class.
| Class | Examples of standard comments |
|---|---|
| 0 | Normal findings |
| F | Normal findings—no pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants detected |
| F/E | Normal findings—no pathogenic variants that could be related to the phenotype were detected |
| E/D | Normal findings—no pathogenic variants that could explain the phenotype were detected |
| E/D | Genetic variant of potential interest detected |
| E/D | Heterozygosity for a recessive genetic variant of potential interest detected |
| D | A genetic variant that increases susceptibility for this phenotype was detected |
| C/B/A | Disease-associated pathogenic variant detected (+/− penetrance, if known) |
| X | Genetic variant unrelated to the clinical question detected |
Comparison of ACMG and ABC classification in dominant (cases 1–6), recessive (cases 7–11), and SNP-array (cases 12–16) settings.
| Case# | Gene/CNV | Finding | Clinical information | ACMG class calculationa | ABC | ACMG class vs ABC class |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NM_000130.4:c.1601G > A p.Arg534Gln MAF 0.04–0.07 (Europeans) | A: unexpected deep venous thrombosis at age 56 | VUS (PS3, PS4, PP1, BA1) | D/5 + 2 | VUS D—susceptibility variant | |
| 2 | NM_004972.3:c.2048_2050del p.(Arg683_Glu684insLys) Not in gnomAD v2.1.1 | A: high platelet counts, dominant trait in healthy asymptomatic family members | LP (PS4, PP1-M, PM2, PP4) | E/4 + 1 | LP E—potential interest variant | |
| 3 | NM_001278614.1:c.915C > A p.(Tyr305a) Not in gnomAD v2.1.1 | B: incidental finding in neonate with cyanosis, unknown if variant is inherited | VUS (PM2, PP3) | E/5 + 0 | VUS E—no explanation found | |
| 4 | NM_015250.3:c.793A > G p.(Met265Val) 8 in gnomAD v2.1.1 | A: family with dominant drop-foot tendency, areflexia and thenar atrophy | VUS (PP1-M, PP3, BS1) | E/3 + 1 | VUS E—potential interest variant | |
| 5 | LRG_293t1:c.8177A > G p.(Tyr2726Cys) Not in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | A: siblings with ca. ovarii, decreased repair function found in one study | LP (PS4, PM2, PP3, BP1) | D/4 + 2 | LP D—susceptibility variant | |
| 6 | NM_000719.6:c.5852C > G p.(Pro1951Arg) de novo Not in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | A: ID with autism, hypospadias and dysmorphic facial features | LP (PS2, PM2, PP2) | E/3 + 2 | LP E—no explanation found | |
| 7 | Chr18(GRCh38):g.5757571588A > G NM_000140.3:c.315-48T > C r.314_315ins315-49_315-1 MAF 0.11 in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | A: erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP), only one variant found | VUS (PS3, PS4, PP1-S, PM3, PP4, BA1) | D/4 + 2 | VUS D—potential interest variant | |
| 8 | LRG_27t1:c.4893G > A p.(Trp1631a) from father Not in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | A: atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome. Only case in family, both parents no signs of aHUS. Five healthy relatives carry the paternal variant in the last exon of C3, and three healthy relatives carry the maternal missense variant. | LP (PS3, PM2, PP3, BS2) | D/4 + 2 | LP D—susceptibility variant | |
LRG_27t1:c.2203C > T p.(Arg735Trp) from mother Not in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | VUS (PM2, PP3, BS2) | E/3 + 2 | VUS E—potential interest variant | |||
LRG_27t1:c.3346G > A p.(Gly1116Arg) from mother MAF 0.002 in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | LB (BP4, BS1) | F/2 + 0 | LB F—not further classified | |||
| 9 | NM_017791.2:c.615G > T p.(Trp205Cys) homozygous 1 in gnomAD v.2.1.1 | A: aborted fetus with hydranencephaly and cerebral vasculopathy (Fowler syndrome) | VUS (PM2, PP3, PP4) | C/3 + 5 | VUS C—pathogenic | |
| 10 | NM_000492.3:c.1521_1523del p.(Phe508del) heterozygous | B: aortic aneurysm in young adult | P (PS1, PS3, BS2?) | E/5 + 0 | P (incidental finding) E—no explanation found | |
| 11 | NM_000492.3:c.1521_1523del p.(Phe508del) heterozygous | A: nasal polyps in young adult | P (PS1, PS3, PS4) | D/5 + 2 | PD—susceptibility variant | |
| 12 | NC_000023.10:g.(123183157 _?)_(?_123704413)dup, unknown if dup on X is de novo | A: boy with learning problems and epilepsy | VUS, score 0.30? | E/3 + 1 | VUS E—potential interest CNV | |
| 13 | Classic deletion (from BP4 to BP5) | Learning problems, psychosis | P, score 1.00 | B/5 + 4 | P B—pathogenic | |
| 14 | Classic duplication (from BP4 to BP5) | Learning problems | VUS, score <0.45 | D/4 + 2 | VUS D—potential interest CNV | |
| 15 | Genome | ~10% of aut. genome is IBD | Fetus with occipital encephalocele and postaxial polydactyly | NA | E/3 + 2 | E—potential interest ROH |
| 16 | Genome | ~10% of aut. genome is IBD | Fetus with normal ultrasound findings | NA | F/3 + 0 | F—normal finding |
Clinical information column: A = good match between known gene function and clinical phenotype, B = poor or no match between known gene function and clinical phenotype, NA not applicable, B benign, LB likely benign, VUS variant of unknown significance, LP likely pathogenic, P pathogenic, IBD identity by descent, aut. autosomal.
aBased on Bayesian score in Tavtigian et al. [25] for SNPs, and Riggs et al. [18] for CNVs (cnvcalc.clinicalgenome.org/cnvcalc/).
Fig. 2The ABC system can be used independently or as an add-on to the ACMG-based classification system.
In the latter case, the VUS class is given a 0 (fVUS) or 3 (HFE) grade in step A of the ABC system, other classes are kept (P = 5, LP = 4, LB = 2, and B = 1). In the second step B of the ABC system, the issue is really how well the genotype and phenotype match, from 0 (no conceivable correlation) to 5 (perfect match). The combined class is given by the steps A and B grading and divided into seven classes: 0 if no step B grading was deemed necessary, and A–F if step B has been done after step A. In step C (optional), each class can be linked to the standard comments that best addresses the clinical question.