Publication: International initiative for a curated variant database improving the diagnosis of hereditary paraganglioma and pheochromocytoma.
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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
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is one of the major genes predisposing to paraganglioma/pheochromocytoma (PPGL). Identifying pathogenic variants in patients with PPGL is essential to the management of patients and relatives due to the increased risk of recurrences, metastases and the emergence of non-PPGL tumours. In this context, the 'NGS and PPGL (NGSnPPGL) Study Group' initiated an international effort to collect, annotate and classify variants and to provide an accurate, expert-curated and freely available variant database.
A total of 223 distinct variants from 737 patients were collected worldwide. Using multiple criteria, each variant was first classified according to a 5-tier grouping based on American College of Medical Genetics and NGSnPPGL standardised recommendations and was then manually reviewed by a panel of experts in the field.
This multistep process resulted in 23 benign/likely benign, 149 pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants and 51 variants of unknown significance (VUS). Expert curation reduced by half the number of variants initially classified as VUS. Variant classifications are publicly accessible via the Leiden Open Variation Database system (https://databases.lovd.nl/shared/genes/SDHB).
This international initiative by a panel of experts allowed us to establish a consensus classification for 223 variants that should be used as a routine tool by geneticists in charge of PPGL laboratory diagnosis. This accurate classification of genetic variants will help to clarify the diagnosis of hereditary PPGL and to improve the clinical care of patients and relatives with PPGL.
A total of 223 distinct variants from 737 patients were collected worldwide. Using multiple criteria, each variant was first classified according to a 5-tier grouping based on American College of Medical Genetics and NGSnPPGL standardised recommendations and was then manually reviewed by a panel of experts in the field.
This multistep process resulted in 23 benign/likely benign, 149 pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants and 51 variants of unknown significance (VUS). Expert curation reduced by half the number of variants initially classified as VUS. Variant classifications are publicly accessible via the Leiden Open Variation Database system (https://databases.lovd.nl/shared/genes/SDHB).
This international initiative by a panel of experts allowed us to establish a consensus classification for 223 variants that should be used as a routine tool by geneticists in charge of PPGL laboratory diagnosis. This accurate classification of genetic variants will help to clarify the diagnosis of hereditary PPGL and to improve the clinical care of patients and relatives with PPGL.
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J Med Genet . 2022 Aug;59(8):785-792.







