Genetic variant interpretation for the neurologist – A pragmatic approach in the next-generation sequencing era in childhood epilepsy

Genetic advances over the past decade have enhanced our understanding of the genetic landscape of childhood epilepsy. However a major challenge for clinicians ha been understanding the rationale and systematic approach towards interpretation of the clinical significance of variant(s) detected in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy research 2024-03, Vol.201, p.107341-107341, Article 107341
Hauptverfasser: Fasaludeen, Alfiya, McTague, Amy, Jose, Manna, Banerjee, Moinak, Sundaram, Soumya, Madhusoodanan, U.K., Radhakrishnan, Ashalatha, Menon, Ramshekhar N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genetic advances over the past decade have enhanced our understanding of the genetic landscape of childhood epilepsy. However a major challenge for clinicians ha been understanding the rationale and systematic approach towards interpretation of the clinical significance of variant(s) detected in their patients. As the clinical paradigm evolves from gene panels to whole exome or whole genome testing including rapid genome sequencing, the number of patients tested and variants identified per patient will only increase. Each step in the process of variant interpretation has limitations and there is no single criterion which enables the clinician to draw reliable conclusions on a causal relationship between the variant and disease without robust clinical phenotyping. Although many automated online analysis software tools are available, these carry a risk of misinterpretation. This guideline provides a pragmatic, real-world approach to variant interpretation for the child neurologist. The focus will be on ascertaining aspects such as variant frequency, subtype, inheritance pattern, structural and functional consequence with regard to genotype-phenotype correlations, while refraining from mere interpretation of the classification provided in a genetic test report. It will not replace the expert advice of colleagues in clinical genetics, however as genomic investigations become a first-line test for epilepsy, it is vital that neurologists and epileptologists are equipped to navigate this landscape. •Monogram on real world genetic test interpretation in the epilepsy clinic.•Necessity of robust genotype-phenotype correlations in childhood epilepsy.•Clinical approach to variants of uncertain significance.
ISSN:0920-1211
1872-6844
DOI:10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2024.107341