Interpreting Incidentally Identified Variants in Genes Associated With Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia in a Large Cohort of Clinical Whole-Exome Genetic Test Referrals.

dc.contributor.author

Landstrom, AP

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Dailey-Schwartz, AL

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Rosenfeld, JA

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Yang, Y

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McLean, MJ

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Miyake, CY

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Valdes, SO

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Fan, Y

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Allen, HD

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Penny, DJ

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Kim, JJ

dc.date.accessioned

2020-04-01T13:31:41Z

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2020-04-01T13:31:41Z

dc.date.issued

2017-04

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2020-04-01T13:31:40Z

dc.description.abstract

BACKGROUND:The rapid expansion of genetic testing has led to increased utilization of clinical whole-exome sequencing (WES). Clinicians and genetic researchers are being faced with assessing risk of disease vulnerability from incidentally identified genetic variants which is typified by variants found in genes associated with sudden death-predisposing catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). We sought to determine whether incidentally identified variants in genes associated with CPVT from WES clinical testing represent disease-associated biomarkers. METHODS AND RESULTS:CPVT-associated genes RYR2 and CASQ2 variants were identified in one of the world's largest collections of clinical WES referral tests (N=6517, Baylor Miraca Genetics Laboratories) and compared with a control cohort of ostensibly healthy individuals (N=60 706) and a case cohort of CPVT cases (N=155). Within the WES cohort, the rate of rare variants in CPVT-associated genes was 8.8% compared with 6.0% among controls and 60.0% among cases. There was a predominance of variants of undetermined significance (97.7%). After protein topology mapping, WES variants colocalized more frequently to residues with variants found in controls compared with cases. Retrospective clinical evaluation of individuals referred to our institution with WES-positive variants demonstrated no evidence of clinical CPVT in individuals with a low pretest clinical suspicion for CPVT. CONCLUSIONS:The prevalence of incidentally identified CPVT-associated variants is ≈9% among WES tests. Variants of undetermined significances in CPVT-associated genes in WES genetic testing, in the absence of clinical suspicion for CPVT, are unlikely to represent markers of CPVT pathogenicity.

dc.identifier

CIRCEP.116.004742

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1941-3149

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1941-3084

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20305

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eng

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Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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Circulation. Arrhythmia and electrophysiology

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10.1161/CIRCEP.116.004742

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Humans

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Tachycardia, Ventricular

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Genetic Predisposition to Disease

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Calsequestrin

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Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel

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Genetic Markers

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Risk Factors

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Retrospective Studies

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Predictive Value of Tests

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DNA Mutational Analysis

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Heart Rate

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Gene Frequency

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Phenotype

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Mutation

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Databases, Genetic

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Child

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Child, Preschool

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Referral and Consultation

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Female

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Male

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Genetic Variation

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Genetic Testing

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Genetic Association Studies

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Exome

dc.title

Interpreting Incidentally Identified Variants in Genes Associated With Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia in a Large Cohort of Clinical Whole-Exome Genetic Test Referrals.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Landstrom, AP|0000-0002-1878-9631

pubs.issue

4

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School of Medicine

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Cell Biology

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Pediatrics, Cardiology

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Duke

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Basic Science Departments

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Pediatrics

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

10

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