Variants of uncertain clinical significance in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer genes: best practices in functional analysis for clinical annotation.

Abstract

Germline DNA tests to identify pathogenic variants in genes linked to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility have become widely available. However, the clinical utility of genetic testing depends on reliable evidence-based classification of sequence variants. Determination of pathogenicity traditionally relies on painstaking pedigree-based segregation analyses. However, the rapid increase in usage of germline DNA tests has led to the discovery of a large number of variants of uncertain clinical significance (VUS). For most VUS there is insufficient information for segregation analysis and therefore assessment of functional consequences is increasingly being used to support clinical annotation. Functional assays need to be accurate, robust, and reproducible to be used for clinical purposes. Here we use the lessons learned from BRCA1 and BRCA2 to identify best practices for the use of functional assays for clinical annotation of germline VUS in breast and ovarian cancer genes. We provide recommendations for the interpretation and use of established functional assays as well as for the development of new assays.

More about this publication

Journal of medical genetics
  • Volume 57
  • Issue nr. 8
  • Pages 509-518
  • Publication date 01-08-2020

This site uses cookies

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.