Validating data from multiplex assays of variant effect: A CanVIG-UK national survey of NHS clinical scientists.

IF 8.1 1区 生物学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Sophie Allen, Alice Garrett, Charlie F Rowlands, Miranda Durkie, George J Burghel, Rachel Robinson, Alison Callaway, Joanne Field, Bethan Frugtniet, Sheila Palmer-Smith, Jonathan Grant, Judith Pagan, Trudi McDevitt, Katie Snape, Helen Hanson, Terri McVeigh, David J Adams, Gregory M Findlay, Rehan M Villani, Amanda B Spurdle, Clare Turnbull
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Advances in technology have made it possible for multiplex assays of variant effect (MAVEs) to systematically generate functional data for thousands of genetic variants. Robust clinical validation and accessible online resources for MAVE data have previously been identified as barriers to the clinical adoption of new MAVEs. We delivered a survey during the November 2024 Cancer Variant Interpretation Group UK (CanVIG-UK) meeting comprising National Health Service (NHS) clinical scientists and clinical geneticists and received 46 responses from individuals regularly performing variant classification for diagnostic reporting. Only 35% reported they would accept clinical validation of the MAVE provided by the authors who conducted the assay; 20% reported they would attempt clinical validation themselves, and 61% would await clinical validation by a trusted central body. 72% reported they would use MAVE data ahead of a formal peer-reviewed publication if reviewed and clinically validated by a trusted central body. When scoring central bodies on a scale of 1-5 for confidence in their review and validation of MAVEs, CanVIG-UK (median = 5), variant curation expert panels (VCEPs; median = 5), and ClinGen SVI Functional Working Group (median = 4) all scored highly. Participants supported making variant-level data accessible via a relevant web resource (although the majority of participants expressed that additional assay-level or variant-level information would have a low likelihood of altering validation scores provided by a trusted central body). These findings, from a comparatively homogeneous clinical diagnostic group operating in a resource-constrained healthcare setting, indicate that clinical application of new MAVEs for variant classification will be delayed unless robust clinical validations are performed by a trusted central body and made readily accessible.

验证来自多种变异效应分析的数据:canvigg - uk对NHS临床科学家的全国调查。
技术的进步使得变异效应的多重分析(MAVEs)能够系统地生成数千种遗传变异的功能数据。强有力的临床验证和MAVE数据的可访问在线资源先前被确定为临床采用新MAVE的障碍。我们在2024年11月英国癌症变异解释小组(canvigg -UK)会议期间进行了一项调查,该会议由国家卫生服务(NHS)临床科学家和临床遗传学家组成,并收到了来自定期进行变异分类诊断报告的个人的46份回复。只有35%的人表示他们会接受进行该检测的作者提供的MAVE的临床验证;20%的人表示他们将尝试自己进行临床验证,61%的人将等待可信赖的中央机构进行临床验证。72%的受访者表示,如果经过可信赖的中央机构的审查和临床验证,他们将在正式的同行评议出版物之前使用MAVE数据。当以1-5分对中心机构评估和验证MAVEs的信心进行评分时,CanVIG-UK(中位数= 5),变体策展专家小组(vcep;中位数= 5),ClinGen SVI功能工作组(中位数= 4)得分均较高。参与者支持通过相关的网络资源访问变量级别的数据(尽管大多数参与者表示,额外的分析级别或变量级别的信息改变可信的中央机构提供的验证分数的可能性很低)。这些研究结果来自于一个资源有限的医疗保健环境中相对同质的临床诊断组,表明除非由可信任的中心机构进行可靠的临床验证并易于获取,否则新的MAVEs用于变异分类的临床应用将被推迟。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.70
自引率
4.10%
发文量
185
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Human Genetics (AJHG) is a monthly journal published by Cell Press, chosen by The American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) as its premier publication starting from January 2008. AJHG represents Cell Press's first society-owned journal, and both ASHG and Cell Press anticipate significant synergies between AJHG content and that of other Cell Press titles.
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