Τρίτη 6 Ιουνίου 2017

Distinguishing pathogenic mutations from background genetic noise in cardiology: the use of large genome databases for genetic interpretation

ABSTRACT

Advances in clinical genetic testing has led to increased insight into the human genome, including how challenging it is to interpret rare genetic variation. In some cases, the ability to detect genetic mutations exceeds the ability to understand their clinical impact, limiting the advantage of these technologies. Obstacles in genomic medicine are many and include: understanding the level of certainty/uncertainty behind pathogenicity determination, the numerous different variant interpretation-guidelines used by clinical laboratories, delivering the certain or uncertain result to the patient, helping patients evaluate medical decisions in light of uncertainty regarding the consequence of the findings. Through publication of large publicly available exome/genome databases, researchers and physicians are now able to highlight dubious variants previously associated with different cardiac traits. Also, continuous efforts through data sharing, international collaborative efforts to develop disease-gene specific guidelines, and computational analyses using large data, will indubitably assist in better variant interpretation and classification. This paper discusses the current, and quickly changing, state of variant interpretation resources within cardiovascular genetic research, i.e. publicly available databases and ways of how cardiovascular genetic counsellors and geneticists can aid in improving variant interpretation in cardiology.

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GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Distribution of the non-reference allele in SCN5A in Non-Finnish Europeans and African-Americans



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