Towards controlled terminology for reporting germline cancer susceptibility variants: An ENIGMA report Guidelines


Authors: Spurdle, A. B.; Greville-Heygate, S.; Antoniou, A. C.; Brown, M.; Burke, L.; de la Hoya, M.; Domchek, S.; Dörk, T.; Firth, H. V.; Monteiro, A. N.; Mensenkamp, A.; Parsons, M. T.; Radice, P.; Robson, M.; Tischkowitz, M.; Tudini, E.; Turnbull, C.; Vreeswijk, M. P. G.; Walker, L. C.; Tavtigian, S.; Eccles, D. M.
Title: Towards controlled terminology for reporting germline cancer susceptibility variants: An ENIGMA report
Abstract: The vocabulary currently used to describe genetic variants and their consequences reflects many years of studying and discovering monogenic disease with high penetrance. With the recent rapid expansion of genetic testing brought about by wide availability of high-throughput massively parallel sequencing platforms, accurate variant interpretation has become a major issue. The vocabulary used to describe single genetic variants in silico, in vitro, in vivo and as a contributor to human disease uses terms in common, but the meaning is not necessarily shared across all these contexts. In the setting of cancer genetic tests, the added dimension of using data from genetic sequencing of tumour DNA to direct treatment is an additional source of confusion to those who are not experienced in cancer genetics. The language used to describe variants identified in cancer susceptibility genetic testing typically still reflects an outdated paradigm of Mendelian inheritance with dichotomous outcomes. Cancer is a common disease with complex genetic architecture; an improved lexicon is required to better communicate among scientists, clinicians and patients, the risks and implications of genetic variants detected. This review arises from a recognition of, and discussion about, inconsistencies in vocabulary usage by members of the ENIGMA international multidisciplinary consortium focused on variant classification in breast-ovarian cancer susceptibility genes. It sets out the vocabulary commonly used in genetic variant interpretation and reporting, and suggests a framework for a common vocabulary that may facilitate understanding and clarity in clinical reporting of germline genetic tests for cancer susceptibility.
Keywords: classification; breast; pathogenicity; guidelines; sequence variants; brca1; recommendations; framework; missense substitutions; codon bias
Journal Title: Journal of Medical Genetics
Volume: 56
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0022-2593
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.  
Date Published: 2019-06-01
Start Page: 347
End Page: 357
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000471883900001
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105872
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 30962250
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Mark E Robson
    676 Robson