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1.
Eur J Hum Genet ; 2024 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38796577

ABSTRACT

Reanalyzing stored genomic data over time is highly effective in increasing diagnostic yield in rare disease. Automation holds the promise of delivering the benefits of reanalysis at scale. Our study aimed to understand current reanalysis practices among Australian clinical and laboratory genetics services and explore attitudes towards large-scale automated re-analysis. We collected audit data regarding testing and reanalysis volumes, policies and procedures from all Australian diagnostic laboratories providing rare disease genomic testing. A genetic health professionals' survey explored current practices, barriers to reanalysis, preferences and attitudes towards automation. Between 2018 and 2021, Australian diagnostic laboratories performed over 25,000 new genomic tests and 950 reanalyses, predominantly in response to clinician requests. Laboratory and clinical genetic health professionals (N = 134) identified workforce capacity as the principal barrier to reanalysis. No specific laboratory or clinical guidelines for genomic data reanalysis or policies were identified nationally. Perceptions of acceptability and feasibility of automating reanalysis were positive, with professionals emphasizing clinical and workflow benefits. In conclusion, there is a large and rapidly growing unmet need for reanalysis of existing genomic data. Beyond developing scalable automated reanalysis pipelines, leadership and policy are needed to successfully transform service delivery models and maximize clinical benefit.

2.
JCO Precis Oncol ; 8: e2400270, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38820502

Subject(s)
Humans
3.
Am J Hum Genet ; 2024 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38815586

ABSTRACT

To date, clinical genetic testing for Mendelian disease variants has focused heavily on exonic coding and intronic gene regions. This multi-step study was undertaken to provide an evidence base for selecting and applying computational approaches for use in clinical classification of 5' cis-regulatory region variants. Curated datasets of clinically reported disease-causing 5' cis-regulatory region variants and variants from matched genomic regions in population controls were used to calibrate six bioinformatic tools as predictors of variant pathogenicity. Likelihood ratio estimates were aligned to code weights following ClinGen recommendations for application of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and the Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG/AMP) classification scheme. Considering code assignment across all reference dataset variants, performance was best for CADD (81.2%) and REMM (81.5%). Optimized thresholds provided moderate evidence toward pathogenicity (CADD, REMM) and moderate (CADD) or supporting (REMM) evidence against pathogenicity. Both sensitivity and specificity of prediction were improved when further categorizing variants based on location in an EPDnew-defined promoter region. Combining predictions (CADD, REMM, and location in a promoter region) increased specificity at the expense of sensitivity. Importantly, the optimal CADD thresholds for assigning ACMG/AMP codes PP3 (≥10) and BP4 (≤8) were vastly different from recommendations for protein-coding variants (PP3 ≥25.3; BP4 ≤22.7); CADD <22.7 would incorrectly assign BP4 for >90% of reported disease-causing cis-regulatory region variants. Our results demonstrate the need to consider a tiered approach and tailored score thresholds to optimize bioinformatic impact prediction for clinical classification of 5' cis-regulatory region variants.

4.
J Natl Cancer Inst ; 2024 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38569880

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A large well-annotated recent international cohort of Li-Fraumeni (LFS) patients with early-stage breast cancer (BC) was examined for shared features. METHODS: This multicentre cohort study included females with a germline TP53 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant and nonmetastatic BC diagnosed between 2002-2022. Clinical and genetic data were obtained from institutional registries and clinical charts. Descriptive statistics were utilized to summarize proportions and differences were assessed by Chi square or Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Metachronous contralateral breast cancer (CBC) risk, radiation-induced sarcoma risk, and recurrence-free survival (RFS) were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier methodology. RESULTS: Among 227 females who met study criteria, the median age of first BC diagnosis was 37 years (range 21-71), 11.9% presented with bilateral synchronous BC and 18.1% had ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) only. In total, 166 (73.1%) underwent mastectomies including 67 bilateral mastectomies as first BC surgery. Among those with retained breast tissue, CBC rate was 25.3% at 5-years. Among 186 invasive tumors, 72.1% were stages I-II, 48.9% node-negative, and the most common subtypes were HR+/HER2- (40.9%) and HR+/HER2 + (34.4%). At a median follow-up of 69.9 months (IQR 32.6-125.9), invasive HR+/HER2- disease had the highest recurrence risk among the subtypes (5-year RFS 61.1%, p = .0012). Among those who received radiation therapy (n = 79), the 5-year radiation-induced sarcoma rate was 4.8%. CONCLUSION: We observed high rates of DCIS, HR+ and HER2+ breast cancers, with a worse outcome in the HR+/HER2- luminal tumors despite appropriate treatment. Confirmation of these findings in further studies could have implications for BC care in LFS.

5.
JCO Precis Oncol ; 8: e2300453, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38412388

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Establishing accurate age-related penetrance figures for the broad range of cancer types that occur in individuals harboring a pathogenic germline variant in the TP53 gene is essential to determine the most effective clinical management strategies. These figures also permit optimal use of cosegregation data for classification of TP53 variants of unknown significance. Penetrance estimation can easily be affected by bias from ascertainment criteria, an issue not commonly addressed by previous studies. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed a maximum likelihood penetrance estimation using full pedigree data from a multicenter study of 146 TP53-positive families, incorporating adjustment for the effect of ascertainment and population-specific background cancer risks. The analysis included pedigrees from Australia, Spain, and United States, with phenotypic information for 4,028 individuals. RESULTS: Core Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) cancers (breast cancer, adrenocortical carcinoma, brain cancer, osteosarcoma, and soft tissue sarcoma) had the highest hazard ratios of all cancers analyzed in this study. The analysis also detected a significantly increased lifetime risk for a range of cancers not previously formally associated with TP53 pathogenic variant status, including colorectal, gastric, lung, pancreatic, and ovarian cancers. The cumulative risk of any cancer type by age 50 years was 92.4% (95% CI, 82.2 to 98.3) for females and 59.7% (95% CI, 39.9 to 81.3) for males. Females had a 63.3% (95% CI, 35.6 to 90.1) cumulative risk of developing breast cancer by age 50 years. CONCLUSION: The results from maximum likelihood analysis confirm the known high lifetime risk for the core LFS-associated cancer types providing new risk estimates and indicate significantly increased lifetime risks for several additional cancer types. Accurate cancer risk estimates will help refine clinical recommendations for TP53 pathogenic variant carriers and improve TP53 variant classification.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Li-Fraumeni Syndrome , Male , Female , Humans , United States , Middle Aged , Li-Fraumeni Syndrome/diagnosis , Li-Fraumeni Syndrome/genetics , Genes, p53/genetics , Pedigree , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Breast Neoplasms/genetics , Risk Factors
6.
Hum Mol Genet ; 33(8): 724-732, 2024 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38271184

ABSTRACT

Since first publication of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Medical Pathology (ACMG/AMP) variant classification guidelines, additional recommendations for application of certain criteria have been released (https://clinicalgenome.org/docs/), to improve their application in the diagnostic setting. However, none have addressed use of the PS4 and PP4 criteria, capturing patient presentation as evidence towards pathogenicity. Application of PS4 can be done through traditional case-control studies, or "proband counting" within or across clinical testing cohorts. Review of the existing PS4 and PP4 specifications for Hereditary Cancer Gene Variant Curation Expert Panels revealed substantial differences in the approach to defining specifications. Using BRCA1, BRCA2 and TP53 as exemplar genes, we calibrated different methods proposed for applying the "PS4 proband counting" criterion. For each approach, we considered limitations, non-independence with other ACMG/AMP criteria, broader applicability, and variability in results for different datasets. Our findings highlight inherent overlap of proband-counting methods with ACMG/AMP frequency codes, and the importance of calibration to derive dataset-specific code weights that can account for potential between-dataset differences in ascertainment and other factors. Our work emphasizes the advantages and generalizability of logistic regression analysis over simple proband-counting approaches to empirically determine the relative predictive capacity and weight of various personal clinical features in the context of multigene panel testing, for improved variant interpretation. We also provide a general protocol, including instructions for data formatting and a web-server for analysis of personal history parameters, to facilitate dataset-specific calibration analyses required to use such data for germline variant classification.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Neoplasms , Humans , Genetic Variation/genetics , Genetic Testing/methods , Genome, Human , Phenotype , Genes, Neoplasm , Neoplasms/genetics
7.
Breast Cancer Res ; 26(1): 6, 2024 01 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38195559

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Reports of dual carriers of pathogenic BRCA1 variants in trans are extremely rare, and so far, most individuals have been associated with a Fanconi Anemia-like phenotype. METHODS: We identified two families with a BRCA1 in-frame exon 20 duplication (Ex20dup). In one male individual, the variant was in trans with the BRCA1 frameshift variant c.2475delC p.(Asp825Glufs*21). We performed splicing analysis and used a transcription activation domain (TAD) assay to assess the functional impact of Ex20dup. We collected pedigrees and mapped the breakpoints of the duplication by long- and short-read genome sequencing. In addition, we performed a mitomycin C (MMC) assay from the dual carrier using cultured lymphoblastoid cells. RESULTS: Genome sequencing and RNA analysis revealed the BRCA1 exon 20 duplication to be in tandem. The duplication was expressed without skipping any one of the two exon 20 copies, resulting in a lack of wild-type transcripts from this allele. TAD assay indicated that the Ex20dup variant has a functional level similar to the well-known moderate penetrant pathogenic BRCA1 variant c.5096G > A p.(Arg1699Gln). MMC assay of the dual carrier indicated a slightly impaired chromosomal repair ability. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first reported case where two BRCA1 variants with demonstrated functional impact are identified in trans in a male patient with an apparently normal clinical phenotype and no BRCA1-associated cancer. The results pinpoint a minimum necessary BRCA1 protein activity to avoid a Fanconi Anemia-like phenotype in compound heterozygous status and yet still predispose carriers to hormone-related cancers. These findings urge caution when counseling families regarding potential Fanconi Anemia risk. Furthermore, prudence should be taken when classifying individual variants as benign based on co-occurrence in trans with well-established pathogenic variants.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Fanconi Anemia , Humans , Male , BRCA1 Protein/genetics , Exons/genetics , Fanconi Anemia/genetics , Mitomycin , Phenotype
8.
J Med Genet ; 61(5): 483-489, 2024 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38160042

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: BRCA1/2 testing is crucial to guide clinical decisions in patients with hereditary breast/ovarian cancer, but detection of variants of uncertain significance (VUSs) prevents proper management of carriers. The ENIGMA (Evidence-based Network for the Interpretation of Germline Mutant Alleles) BRCA1/2 Variant Curation Expert Panel (VCEP) has recently developed BRCA1/2 variant classification guidelines consistent with ClinGen processes, specified against the ACMG/AMP (American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular-Pathology) classification framework. METHODS: The ClinGen-approved BRCA1/2-specified ACMG/AMP classification guidelines were applied to BRCA1/2 VUSs identified from 2011 to 2022 in a series of patients, retrieving information from the VCEP documentation, public databases, literature and ENIGMA unpublished data. Then, we critically re-evaluated carrier families based on new results and checked consistency of updated classification with main sources for clinical interpretation of BRCA1/2 variants. RESULTS: Among 166 VUSs detected in 231 index cases, 135 (81.3%) found in 197 index cases were classified by applying BRCA1/2-specified ACMG/AMP criteria: 128 (94.8%) as Benign/Likely Benign and 7 (5.2%) as Pathogenic/Likely Pathogenic. The average time from the first report as 'VUS' to classification using this approach was 49.4 months. Considering that 15 of these variants found in 64 families had already been internally reclassified prior to this work, this study provided 121 new reclassifications among the 151 (80.1%) remaining VUSs, relevant to 133/167 (79.6%) families. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrated the effectiveness of new BRCA1/2 ACMG/AMP classification guidelines for VUS classification within a clinical cohort, and their important clinical impact. Furthermore, they suggested a cadence of no more than 3 years for regular review of VUSs, which however requires time, expertise and resources.


Subject(s)
BRCA1 Protein , BRCA2 Protein , Breast Neoplasms , Genetic Variation , Humans , BRCA1 Protein/genetics , BRCA2 Protein/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genetic Testing/methods
9.
Genome Med ; 15(1): 74, 2023 09 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37723522

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many families and individuals do not meet criteria for a known hereditary cancer syndrome but display unusual clusters of cancers. These families may carry pathogenic variants in cancer predisposition genes and be at higher risk for developing cancer. METHODS: This multi-centre prospective study recruited 195 cancer-affected participants suspected to have a hereditary cancer syndrome for whom previous clinical targeted genetic testing was either not informative or not available. To identify pathogenic disease-causing variants explaining participant presentation, germline whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and a comprehensive cancer virtual gene panel analysis were undertaken. RESULTS: Pathogenic variants consistent with the presenting cancer(s) were identified in 5.1% (10/195) of participants and pathogenic variants considered secondary findings with potential risk management implications were identified in another 9.7% (19/195) of participants. Health economic analysis estimated the marginal cost per case with an actionable variant was significantly lower for upfront WGS with virtual panel ($8744AUD) compared to standard testing followed by WGS ($24,894AUD). Financial analysis suggests that national adoption of diagnostic WGS testing would require a ninefold increase in government annual expenditure compared to conventional testing. CONCLUSIONS: These findings make a case for replacing conventional testing with WGS to deliver clinically important benefits for cancer patients and families. The uptake of such an approach will depend on the perspectives of different payers on affordability.


Subject(s)
Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary , Humans , Prospective Studies , Oncogenes , Genetic Testing , Germ Cells
10.
J Med Genet ; 60(12): 1215-1217, 2023 Nov 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37536919

ABSTRACT

The gene-disease relationship for CHEK2 remains listed as 'Li-Fraumeni syndrome 2' in public resources such as OMIM and MONDO, despite published evidence to the contrary, causing frustration among Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) clinical experts. Here, we compared personal cancer characteristics of 2095 CHEK2 and 248 TP53 pathogenic variant carriers undergoing multigene panel testing at Ambry Genetics against 15 135 individuals with no known pathogenic variant. Our results from a within-cohort logistic regression approach highlight obvious differences between clinical presentation of TP53 and CHEK2 pathogenic variant carriers, with no evidence of CHEK2 being associated with any of the TP53-related core LFS cancers. These findings emphasise the need to replace 'Li-Fraumeni syndrome 2' as the CHEK2-associated disease name, thereby limiting potential confusion.


Subject(s)
Li-Fraumeni Syndrome , Humans , Li-Fraumeni Syndrome/epidemiology , Li-Fraumeni Syndrome/genetics , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Germ-Line Mutation/genetics , Checkpoint Kinase 2/genetics
12.
Am J Hum Genet ; 110(7): 1046-1067, 2023 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37352859

ABSTRACT

The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG)/Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) framework for classifying variants uses six evidence categories related to the splicing potential of variants: PVS1, PS3, PP3, BS3, BP4, and BP7. However, the lack of guidance on how to apply such codes has contributed to variation in the specifications developed by different Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) Variant Curation Expert Panels. The ClinGen Sequence Variant Interpretation Splicing Subgroup was established to refine recommendations for applying ACMG/AMP codes relating to splicing data and computational predictions. We utilized empirically derived splicing evidence to (1) determine the evidence weighting of splicing-related data and appropriate criteria code selection for general use, (2) outline a process for integrating splicing-related considerations when developing a gene-specific PVS1 decision tree, and (3) exemplify methodology to calibrate splice prediction tools. We propose repurposing the PVS1_Strength code to capture splicing assay data that provide experimental evidence for variants resulting in RNA transcript(s) with loss of function. Conversely, BP7 may be used to capture RNA results demonstrating no splicing impact for intronic and synonymous variants. We propose that the PS3/BS3 codes are applied only for well-established assays that measure functional impact not directly captured by RNA-splicing assays. We recommend the application of PS1 based on similarity of predicted RNA-splicing effects for a variant under assessment in comparison with a known pathogenic variant. The recommendations and approaches for consideration and evaluation of RNA-assay evidence described aim to help standardize variant pathogenicity classification processes when interpreting splicing-based evidence.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Genome, Human , Humans , United States , Genomics/methods , Alleles , RNA Splicing/genetics , Genetic Testing/methods
13.
iScience ; 26(5): 106590, 2023 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37168552

ABSTRACT

To detect novel endometrial cancer risk variants, we leveraged information from endometrial cancer risk factors in a multi-trait GWAS analysis. We first assessed causal relationships between established and suspected endometrial cancer risk factors, and endometrial cancer using Mendelian randomization. Following multivariable analysis, five independent risk factors (waist circumference, testosterone levels, sex hormone binding globulin levels, age at menarche, and age at natural menopause) were included in a multi-trait Bayesian GWAS analysis. We identified three potentially novel loci that associate with endometrial cancer risk, one of which (7q22.1) replicated in an independent endometrial cancer GWAS dataset and was genome-wide significant in a meta-analysis. This locus may affect endometrial cancer risk through altered testosterone levels. Consistent with this, we observed colocalization between the signals for endometrial cancer risk and expression of CYP3A7, a gene involved in testosterone metabolism. Thus, our findings suggest opportunities for hormone therapy to prevent or treat endometrial cancer.

14.
Bioinformatics ; 39(4)2023 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37021934

ABSTRACT

SUMMARY: SpliceAI is a widely used splicing prediction tool and its most common application relies on the maximum delta score to assign variant impact on splicing. We developed the SpliceAI-10k calculator (SAI-10k-calc) to extend use of this tool to predict: the splicing aberration type including pseudoexonization, intron retention, partial exon deletion, and (multi)exon skipping using a 10 kb analysis window; the size of inserted or deleted sequence; the effect on reading frame; and the altered amino acid sequence. SAI-10k-calc has 95% sensitivity and 96% specificity for predicting variants that impact splicing, computed from a control dataset of 1212 single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) with curated splicing assay results. Notably, it has high performance (≥84% accuracy) for predicting pseudoexon and partial intron retention. The automated amino acid sequence prediction allows for efficient identification of variants that are expected to result in mRNA nonsense-mediated decay or translation of truncated proteins. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: SAI-10k-calc is implemented in R (https://github.com/adavi4/SAI-10k-calc) and also available as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. Users can adjust the default thresholds to suit their target performance values.


Subject(s)
RNA Splicing , Introns , Exons , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence
15.
J Community Genet ; 14(3): 307-317, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37012465

ABSTRACT

The complexity of genetic variant interpretation means that a proportion of individuals who undergo genetic testing for a hereditary cancer syndrome will have their test result reclassified over time. Such a reclassification may involve a clinically significant upgrade or downgrade in pathogenicity, which may have significant implications for medical management. To date, few studies have examined the psychosocial impact of a reclassification in a hereditary cancer syndrome context. To address this gap, semi-structured telephone interviews were performed with eighteen individuals who had a BRCA1, BRCA2 or Lynch syndrome-related (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6 or PMS2) gene variant reclassified. The interviews were analysed utilising an inductive, qualitative approach and emergent themes were identified by thematic analysis. Variable levels of recall amongst participants were found. Common motivations for initial testing included a significant personal and/or family history of cancer and a desire to "find an answer". No individual whose uncertain result was upgraded reported negative psychosocial outcomes; most reported adapting to their reclassified result and appraised their genetic testing experience positively. However, individuals whose likely pathogenic/pathogenic results were downgraded reported feelings of anger, shock and sadness post reclassification, highlighting that additional psychosocial support may be required for some. Genetic counselling issues and recommendations for clinical practice are outlined.

16.
EBioMedicine ; 91: 104510, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37086649

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The causal relevance of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) for risk of site-specific cancers remains uncertain. METHODS: Using a Mendelian randomization (MR) framework, we assessed the causal relevance of PUFAs for risk of cancer in European and East Asian ancestry individuals. We defined the primary exposure as PUFA desaturase activity, proxied by rs174546 at the FADS locus. Secondary exposures were defined as omega 3 and omega 6 PUFAs that could be proxied by genetic polymorphisms outside the FADS region. Our study used summary genetic data on 10 PUFAs and 67 cancers, corresponding to 562,871 cases and 1,619,465 controls, collected by the Fatty Acids in Cancer Mendelian Randomization Collaboration. We estimated odds ratios (ORs) for cancer per standard deviation increase in genetically proxied PUFA exposures. FINDINGS: Genetically elevated PUFA desaturase activity was associated (P < 0.0007) with higher risk (OR [95% confidence interval]) of colorectal cancer (1.09 [1.07-1.11]), esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (1.16 [1.06-1.26]), lung cancer (1.06 [1.03-1.08]) and basal cell carcinoma (1.05 [1.02-1.07]). There was little evidence for associations with reproductive cancers (OR = 1.00 [95% CI: 0.99-1.01]; Pheterogeneity = 0.25), urinary system cancers (1.03 [0.99-1.06], Pheterogeneity = 0.51), nervous system cancers (0.99 [0.95-1.03], Pheterogeneity = 0.92) or blood cancers (1.01 [0.98-1.04], Pheterogeneity = 0.09). Findings for colorectal cancer and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma remained compatible with causality in sensitivity analyses for violations of assumptions. Secondary MR analyses highlighted higher omega 6 PUFAs (arachidonic acid, gamma-linolenic acid and dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid) as potential mediators. PUFA biosynthesis is known to interact with aspirin, which increases risk of bleeding and inflammatory bowel disease. In a phenome-wide MR study of non-neoplastic diseases, we found that genetic lowering of PUFA desaturase activity, mimicking a hypothetical intervention to reduce cancer risk, was associated (P < 0.0006) with increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease but not bleeding. INTERPRETATION: The PUFA biosynthesis pathway may be an intervention target for prevention of colorectal cancer and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma but with potential for increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease. FUNDING: Cancer Resesrch UK (C52724/A20138, C18281/A19169). UK Medical Research Council (MR/P014054/1). National Institute for Health Research (NIHR202411). UK Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00011/1, MC_UU_00011/3, MC_UU_00011/6, and MC_UU_00011/4). National Cancer Institute (R00 CA215360). National Institutes of Health (U01 CA164973, R01 CA60987, R01 CA72520, U01 CA74806, R01 CA55874, U01 CA164973 and U01 CA164973).


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms , Esophageal Neoplasms , Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma , Fatty Acids, Omega-3 , Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Humans , Fatty Acid Desaturases/genetics , Fatty Acid Desaturases/metabolism , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/metabolism , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
17.
medRxiv ; 2023 Feb 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36865205

ABSTRACT

The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) and the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) framework for classifying variants uses six evidence categories related to the splicing potential of variants: PVS1 (null variant in a gene where loss-of-function is the mechanism of disease), PS3 (functional assays show damaging effect on splicing), PP3 (computational evidence supports a splicing effect), BS3 (functional assays show no damaging effect on splicing), BP4 (computational evidence suggests no splicing impact), and BP7 (silent change with no predicted impact on splicing). However, the lack of guidance on how to apply such codes has contributed to variation in the specifications developed by different Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) Variant Curation Expert Panels. The ClinGen Sequence Variant Interpretation (SVI) Splicing Subgroup was established to refine recommendations for applying ACMG/AMP codes relating to splicing data and computational predictions. Our study utilised empirically derived splicing evidence to: 1) determine the evidence weighting of splicing-related data and appropriate criteria code selection for general use, 2) outline a process for integrating splicing-related considerations when developing a gene-specific PVS1 decision tree, and 3) exemplify methodology to calibrate bioinformatic splice prediction tools. We propose repurposing of the PVS1_Strength code to capture splicing assay data that provide experimental evidence for variants resulting in RNA transcript(s) with loss of function. Conversely BP7 may be used to capture RNA results demonstrating no impact on splicing for both intronic and synonymous variants, and for missense variants if protein functional impact has been excluded. Furthermore, we propose that the PS3 and BS3 codes are applied only for well-established assays that measure functional impact that is not directly captured by RNA splicing assays. We recommend the application of PS1 based on similarity of predicted RNA splicing effects for a variant under assessment in comparison to a known Pathogenic variant. The recommendations and approaches for consideration and evaluation of RNA assay evidence described aim to help standardise variant pathogenicity classification processes and result in greater consistency when interpreting splicing-based evidence.

18.
Am J Hum Genet ; 110(3): 419-426, 2023 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36868206

ABSTRACT

Australian Genomics is a national collaborative partnership of more than 100 organizations piloting a whole-of-system approach to integrating genomics into healthcare, based on federation principles. In the first five years of operation, Australian Genomics has evaluated the outcomes of genomic testing in more than 5,200 individuals across 19 rare disease and cancer flagship studies. Comprehensive analyses of the health economic, policy, ethical, legal, implementation and workforce implications of incorporating genomics in the Australian context have informed evidence-based change in policy and practice, resulting in national government funding and equity of access for a range of genomic tests. Simultaneously, Australian Genomics has built national skills, infrastructure, policy, and data resources to enable effective data sharing to drive discovery research and support improvements in clinical genomic delivery.


Subject(s)
Genomics , Health Policy , Humans , Australia , Rare Diseases , Delivery of Health Care
19.
HGG Adv ; 4(2): 100185, 2023 04 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36908940

ABSTRACT

Alternative splicing contributes to cancer development. Indeed, splicing analysis of cancer genome-wide association study (GWAS) risk variants has revealed likely causal variants. To systematically assess GWAS variants for splicing effects, we developed a prioritization workflow using a combination of splicing prediction tools, alternative transcript isoforms, and splicing quantitative trait locus (sQTL) annotations. Application of this workflow to candidate causal variants from 16 endometrial cancer GWAS risk loci highlighted single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that were predicted to upregulate alternative transcripts. For two variants, sQTL data supported the predicted impact on splicing. At the 17q11.2 locus, the protective allele for rs7502834 was associated with increased splicing of an exon in a NF1 alternative transcript encoding a truncated protein in adipose tissue and is consistent with an endometrial cancer transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) finding in adipose tissue. Notably, NF1 haploinsufficiency is protective for obesity, a well-established risk factor for endometrial cancer. At the 17q21.32 locus, the rs2278868 risk allele was predicted to upregulate a SKAP1 transcript that is subject to nonsense-mediated decay, concordant with a corresponding sQTL in lymphocytes. This is consistent with a TWAS finding that indicates decreased SKAP1 expression in blood increases endometrial cancer risk. As SKAP1 is involved in T cell immune responses, decreased SKAP1 expression may impact endometrial tumor immunosurveillance. In summary, our analysis has identified potentially causal endometrial cancer GWAS risk variants with plausible biological mechanisms and provides a splicing annotation workflow to aid interpretation of other GWAS datasets.


Subject(s)
Endometrial Neoplasms , Genome-Wide Association Study , Female , Humans , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci/genetics , Alternative Splicing , Endometrial Neoplasms/genetics , Phosphoproteins/genetics
20.
N Engl J Med ; 388(13): 1181-1190, 2023 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36988593

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori infection is a well-known risk factor for gastric cancer. However, the contribution of germline pathogenic variants in cancer-predisposing genes and their effect, when combined with H. pylori infection, on the risk of gastric cancer has not been widely evaluated. METHODS: We evaluated the association between germline pathogenic variants in 27 cancer-predisposing genes and the risk of gastric cancer in a sample of 10,426 patients with gastric cancer and 38,153 controls from BioBank Japan. We also assessed the combined effect of pathogenic variants and H. pylori infection status on the risk of gastric cancer and calculated the cumulative risk in 1433 patients with gastric cancer and 5997 controls from the Hospital-based Epidemiologic Research Program at Aichi Cancer Center (HERPACC). RESULTS: Germline pathogenic variants in nine genes (APC, ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDH1, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PALB2) were associated with the risk of gastric cancer. We found an interaction between H. pylori infection and pathogenic variants in homologous-recombination genes with respect to the risk of gastric cancer in the sample from HERPACC (relative excess risk due to the interaction, 16.01; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.22 to 29.81; P = 0.02). At 85 years of age, persons with H. pylori infection and a pathogenic variant had a higher cumulative risk of gastric cancer than noncarriers infected with H. pylori (45.5% [95% CI, 20.7 to 62.6] vs. 14.4% [95% CI, 12.2 to 16.6]). CONCLUSIONS: H. pylori infection modified the risk of gastric cancer associated with germline pathogenic variants in homologous-recombination genes. (Funded by the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development and others.).


Subject(s)
Helicobacter Infections , Helicobacter pylori , Homologous Recombination , Stomach Neoplasms , Humans , Helicobacter Infections/complications , Helicobacter Infections/genetics , Helicobacter Infections/microbiology , Helicobacter pylori/genetics , Risk Factors , Stomach Neoplasms/etiology , Stomach Neoplasms/genetics , Germ-Line Mutation/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Homologous Recombination/genetics
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