Specifications of the variant curation guidelines for <i>ITGA2B</i>/<i>ITGB3</i>: ClinGen Platelet Disorder Variant Curation Panel

Justyne Ross(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Bing Zhang(Stanford University), Kristy Lee(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Shruthi Mohan(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brian R. Branchford(Versiti Blood Center of Wisconsin), Paul F. Bray(University of Utah), Stefanie Dugan(Versiti Blood Center of Wisconsin), Kathleen Freson(KU Leuven), Paula G. Heller(Lankenau Institute for Medical Research), Walter H.A. Kahr(University of Toronto), Michele P. Lambert(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Lori Luchtman‐Jones(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Minjie Luo(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Juliana Perez Botero(Medical College of Wisconsin), Matthew T. Rondina(University of Utah), Gabriella Ryan(American Society of Hematology), Sarah K. Westbury(University of Bristol), Wolfgang Bergmeier(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jorge Di Paola(Washington University in St. Louis)
Blood Advances
January 20, 2021
Cited by 37Open Access
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Abstract

Accurate and consistent sequence variant interpretation is critical to the correct diagnosis and appropriate clinical management and counseling of patients with inherited genetic disorders. To minimize discrepancies in variant curation and classification among different clinical laboratories, the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG), along with the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), published standards and guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants in 2015. Because the rules are not universally applicable to different genes or disorders, the Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) Platelet Disorder Expert Panel (PD-EP) has been tasked to make ACMG/AMP rule specifications for inherited platelet disorders. ITGA2B and ITGB3, the genes underlying autosomal recessive Glanzmann thrombasthenia (GT), were selected as the pilot genes for specification. Eight types of evidence covering clinical phenotype, functional data, and computational/population data were evaluated in the context of GT by the ClinGen PD-EP. The preliminary specifications were validated with 70 pilot ITGA2B/ITGB3 variants and further refined. In the final adapted criteria, gene- or disease-based specifications were made to 16 rules, including 7 with adjustable strength; no modification was made to 5 rules; and 7 rules were deemed not applicable to GT. Employing the GT-specific ACMG/AMP criteria to the pilot variants resulted in a reduction of variants classified with unknown significance from 29% to 20%. The overall concordance with the initial expert assertions was 71%. These adapted criteria will serve as guidelines for GT-related variant interpretation to increase specificity and consistency across laboratories and allow for better clinical integration of genetic knowledge into patient care.


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