Imperial College London

Claire L. Shovlin PhD FRCP

Faculty of MedicineNational Heart & Lung Institute

Professor of Practice (Clinical and Molecular Medicine)
 
 
 
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Contact

 

c.shovlin Website

 
 
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Location

 

534Block L Hammersmith HospitalHammersmith Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Citation

BibTex format

@article{Davieson:2021:10.1016/j.ejmg.2021.104312,
author = {Davieson, CD and Joyce, KE and Sharma, L and Shovlin, CL},
doi = {10.1016/j.ejmg.2021.104312},
journal = {European Journal of Medical Genetics},
pages = {1--5},
title = {DNA variant classification–reconsidering “allele rarity” and “phenotype” criteria in ACMG/AMP guidelines},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmg.2021.104312},
volume = {64},
year = {2021}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Recent guidance suggested modified DNA variant pathogenicity assignments based on genome-wide allele rarity. Different a priori probabilities of pathogenicity operate where patients already have clinical diagnoses, and are found to have a very rare variant in a gene known to cause their disease, compared to predictive testing of a clinically unaffected individual. We tested new recommendations from the ClinGen Sequence Variant Interpretation Working Group for ClinVar-listed, loss-of-function variants meeting the very strong evidence of pathogenicity criterion [PVS1] in genes for 3 specific diseases where causal gene identification can modify clinical care of an individual- Von Willebrand disease, cystic fibrosis and hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia. Across these diseases, current rules leave 20/1278 (1.6%) of loss-of-function variants as variants of uncertain significance (VUS that may not be reported to clinicians), and 207/1278 (17.2%) as likely pathogenic. Applying the new ClinGen rule enabling PM2 and PVS1 to delineate likely pathogenicity still left 8/1278 (0.9%) as VUS (reflecting non-PVS1 calls by the submitters), and the majority of null alleles meeting PVS1 as merely likely pathogenic. We favour an approach whereby, for PVS1 variants in patients who personally meet PP4 in a disease where casual variants are commonly family-specific, the PM2 allele rarity criterion is upgraded to permit a pathogenic call. Of 1278 ClinVar-listed frameshift, nonsense and canonical splice site variants that met PVS1 in the 3 conditions, 16.0% (204/1278) would be newly designated as pathogenic, avoiding misinterpretation outside of clinical genetics communities. We suggest further discussion around variant assessment across different clinical applications, potentially guided by PP4 alerts to distinguish personal versus family phenotypic history.
AU - Davieson,CD
AU - Joyce,KE
AU - Sharma,L
AU - Shovlin,CL
DO - 10.1016/j.ejmg.2021.104312
EP - 5
PY - 2021///
SN - 1769-7212
SP - 1
TI - DNA variant classification–reconsidering “allele rarity” and “phenotype” criteria in ACMG/AMP guidelines
T2 - European Journal of Medical Genetics
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmg.2021.104312
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1769721221001786?via%3Dihub
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/91315
VL - 64
ER -