Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Clinical laboratories collaborate to resolve differences in variant interpretations submitted to ClinVar

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 19; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/gim.2017.14

ISSN

1530-0366

Autores

Steven M. Harrison, Jill S. Dolinsky, Amy E. Knight Johnson, Tina Pesaran, Danielle R. Azzariti, Sherri J. Bale, Elizabeth Chao, Soma Das, Lisa M. Vincent, Heidi L. Rehm,

Tópico(s)

Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics

Resumo

PurposeData sharing through ClinVar offers a unique opportunity to identify interpretation differences between laboratories. As part of a ClinGen initiative, four clinical laboratories (Ambry, GeneDx, Partners Healthcare Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, and University of Chicago Genetic Services Laboratory) collaborated to identify the basis of interpretation differences and to investigate if data sharing and reassessment resolve interpretation differences by analyzing a subset of variants.MethodsClinVar variants with submissions from at least two of the four participating laboratories were compared. For a subset of identified differences, laboratories documented the basis for discordance, shared internal data, independently reassessed with the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics–Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG-AMP) guidelines, and then compared interpretations.ResultsAt least two of the participating laboratories interpreted 6,169 variants in ClinVar, of which 88.3% were initially concordant. Laboratories reassessed 242/724 initially discordant variants, of which 87.2% (211) were resolved by reassessment with current criteria and/or internal data sharing; 12.8% (31) of reassessed variants remained discordant owing to differences in the application of the ACMG-AMP guidelines.ConclusionParticipating laboratories increased their overall concordance from 88.3 to 91.7%, indicating that sharing variant interpretations in ClinVar—thereby allowing identification of differences and motivation to resolve those differences—is critical to moving toward more consistent variant interpretations.Genet Med advance online publication 09 March 2017

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