The Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen): Advancing genomic knowledge through global curation

The Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) is a National Institutes of Health-funded program founded 10 years ago that defines the clinical relevance of genes and variants for medical and research use. ClinGen working groups develop standards for data sharing and curating genomic knowledge. Expert panel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genetics in medicine 2025-01, Vol.27 (1), p.101228, Article 101228
Hauptverfasser: Andersen, Erica F., Azzariti, Danielle R., Babb, Larry, Berg, Jonathan S., Biesecker, Leslie G., Bly, Zo, Buchanan, Adam H., DiStefano, Marina T., Gong, Li, Harrison, Steven M., Hunter, Jessica Ezzell, Kattman, Brandi, Klein, Teri E., Landrum, Melissa J., Manickam, Kandamurugu, Marroquin, Alessandra Serrano, Martin, Christa L., Milko, Laura V., Milosavljevic, Aleksandar, Morales, Joannella, Nelson, Tristan H., Plon, Sharon E., Powell, Bradford C., Ramos, Erin M., Rehm, Heidi L., Riggs, Erin R., Ritter, Deborah, Shah, Neethu, Thaxton, Courtney L., Thorland, Erik C., Weaver, Meredith A., Weller, Phillip L., Wright, Matt W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) is a National Institutes of Health-funded program founded 10 years ago that defines the clinical relevance of genes and variants for medical and research use. ClinGen working groups develop standards for data sharing and curating genomic knowledge. Expert panels, with >2500 active members from 67 countries, curate the validity of monogenic disease relationships, pathogenicity of genetic variation, dosage sensitivity of genes, and actionability of gene-disease interventions using ClinGen standards, infrastructure, and curation interfaces. Results are available on clinicalgenome.org and classified variants are also submitted to ClinVar, a publicly available database hosted by the National Institutes of Health. As of January 2024, over 2700 genes have been curated (2420 gene-disease relationships for validity, 1557 genes for dosage sensitivity, and 447 gene-condition pairs for actionability), and 5161 unique variants have been classified for pathogenicity. New efforts are underway in somatic cancer, complex disease and pharmacogenomics, and a systematic approach to addressing justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. ClinGen’s knowledge can be used to build evidence-based genetic testing panels, interpret copy-number variation, resolve discrepancies in variant classification, guide disclosure of genomic findings to patients, and assess new predictive algorithms. To get involved in ClinGen activities go to https://www.clinicalgenome.org/start. [Display omitted]
ISSN:1098-3600
1530-0366
1530-0366
DOI:10.1016/j.gim.2024.101228