Points to consider for laboratories reporting results from diagnostic genomic sequencing

Although NGS technologies are well-embedded in the clinical setting for identification of genetic causes of disease, guidelines issued by professional bodies are inconsistent regarding some aspects of reporting results. Most recommendations do not give detailed guidance about whether variants of unc...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of human genetics : EJHG 2018-01, Vol.26 (1), p.36-43
Hauptverfasser: Vears, D F, Sénécal, K, Clarke, A J, Jackson, L, Laberge, A M, Lovrecic, L, Piton, A, Van Gassen, K L I, Yntema, H G, Knoppers, B M, Borry, P
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 36
container_title European journal of human genetics : EJHG
container_volume 26
creator Vears, D F
Sénécal, K
Clarke, A J
Jackson, L
Laberge, A M
Lovrecic, L
Piton, A
Van Gassen, K L I
Yntema, H G
Knoppers, B M
Borry, P
description Although NGS technologies are well-embedded in the clinical setting for identification of genetic causes of disease, guidelines issued by professional bodies are inconsistent regarding some aspects of reporting results. Most recommendations do not give detailed guidance about whether variants of uncertain significance (VUS) should be reported by laboratory personnel to clinicians, and give conflicting messages regarding whether unsolicited findings (UF) should be reported. There are also differences both in their recommendations regarding whether actively searching for secondary findings (SF) is appropriate, and in the extent to which they address the duty (or lack thereof) to reanalyse variants when new information arises. An interdisciplinary working group considered the current guidelines, their own experiences, and data from a recent qualitative study to develop a set of points to consider for laboratories reporting results from diagnostic NGS. These points to consider fall under six categories: (i) Testing approaches and technologies used, (ii) Approaches for VUS; (iii) Approaches for reporting UF, (iv) Approaches regarding SF; (v) Reanalysis of data & re-contact; and vi) Minors. While it is unclear whether uniformity in reporting across all laboratories is desirable, we hope these points to consider will be useful to diagnostic laboratories as they develop their processes for making decisions about reporting VUS and UF from NGS in the diagnostic context.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41431-017-0043-9
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source MEDLINE; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Genetic Testing - standards
Humans
Laboratories
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Reproducibility of Results
Research Report - standards
Sequence Analysis, DNA - standards
title Points to consider for laboratories reporting results from diagnostic genomic sequencing
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