Cholesterol metabolism is a potential therapeutic target for Rett syndrome |
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Authors: | J.V. Patankar |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, , Vancouver, BC, V5Z4H4 Canada |
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Abstract: | Genetic testing has the potential to guide the prevention and treatment of disease in a variety of settings, and recent technical advances have greatly increased our ability to acquire large amounts of genetic data. The interpretation of this data remains challenging, as the clinical significance of genetic variation detected in the laboratory is not always clear. Although regulatory agencies and professional societies provide some guidance regarding the classification, reporting, and long‐term follow‐up of variants, few protocols for the implementation of these guidelines have been described. Because the primary aim of clinical testing is to provide results to inform medical management, a variant classification program that offers timely, accurate, confident and cost‐effective interpretation of variants should be an integral component of the laboratory process. Here we describe the components of our laboratory's current variant classification program (VCP), based on 20 years of experience and over one million samples tested, using the BRCA1/2 genes as a model. Our VCP has lowered the percentage of tests in which one or more BRCA1/2 variants of uncertain significance (VUSs) are detected to 2.1% in the absence of a pathogenic mutation, demonstrating how the coordinated application of resources toward classification and reclassification significantly impacts the clinical utility of testing. |
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Keywords: | BRCA1 BRCA2 co‐segregation HBOC hereditary breast and ovarian cancer variant classification variants of uncertain significance VUS |
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