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      Reanalysis and reclassification of rare genetic variants associated with inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes

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          Abstract

          Background

          Accurate interpretation of rare genetic variants is a challenge for clinical translation. Updates in recommendations for rare variant classification require the reanalysis and reclassification. We aim to perform an exhaustive re-analysis of rare variants associated with inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes, which were classified ten years ago, to determine whether their classification aligns with current standards and research findings.

          Methods

          In 2010, the rare variants identified through genetic analysis were classified following recommendations available at that time. Nowadays, the same variants have been reclassified following current American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics recommendations.

          Findings

          Our cohort included 104 cases diagnosed with inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes and 17 post-mortem cases in which inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes was cause of death. 71.87% of variants change their classification. While 65.62% of variants were classified as likely pathogenic in 2010, after reanalysis, only 17.96% remain as likely pathogenic. In 2010, 18.75% of variants were classified as uncertain role but nowadays 60.15% of variants are classified of unknown significance.

          Interpretation

          Reclassification occurred in more than 70% of rare variants associated with inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes. Our results support the periodical reclassification and personalized clinical translation of rare variants to improve diagnosis and adjust treatment.

          Funding

          Obra Social "La Caixa Foundation" (ID 100010434, LCF/PR/GN16/50290001 and LCF/PR/GN19/50320002), Fondo Investigacion Sanitaria (FIS PI16/01203 and FIS, PI17/01690), Sociedad Española de Cardiología, and “Fundacio Privada Daniel Bravo Andreu”.

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          Most cited references20

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          Natural selection on genes that underlie human disease susceptibility.

          What evolutionary forces shape genes that contribute to the risk of human disease? Do similar selective pressures act on alleles that underlie simple versus complex disorders [1-3]? Answers to these questions will shed light onto the origin of human disorders (e.g., [4]) and help to predict the population frequencies of alleles that contribute to disease risk, with important implications for the efficient design of mapping studies [5-7]. As a first step toward addressing these questions, we created a hand-curated version of the Mendelian Inheritance in Man database (OMIM). We then examined selective pressures on Mendelian-disease genes, genes that contribute to complex-disease risk, and genes known to be essential in mouse by analyzing patterns of human polymorphism and of divergence between human and rhesus macaque. We found that Mendelian-disease genes appear to be under widespread purifying selection, especially when the disease mutations are dominant (rather than recessive). In contrast, the class of genes that influence complex-disease risk shows little signs of evolutionary conservation, possibly because this category includes targets of both purifying and positive selection.
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            Genetic purgatory and the cardiac channelopathies: Exposing the variants of uncertain/unknown significance issue.

            Merriam-Webster's online dictionary defines purgatory as "an intermediate state after death for expiatory purification" or more specifically as "a place or state of punishment wherein according to Roman Catholic doctrine the souls of those who die in God׳s grace may make satisfaction for past sins and so become fit for heaven." Alternatively, it is defined as "a place or state of temporary suffering or misery." Either way, purgatory is a place where you are stuck, and you don't want to be stuck there. It is in this context that the term genetic purgatory is introduced. Genetic purgatory is a place where the genetic test-ordering physician and patients and their families are stuck when a variant of uncertain/unknown significance (VUS) has been elucidated. It is in this dark place where suffering and misery are occurring because of unenlightened handling of a VUS, which includes using the VUS for predictive genetic testing and making radical treatment recommendations based on the presence or absence of a so-called maybe mutation. Before one can escape from this miserable place, one must first recognize that one is stuck there. Hence, the purpose of this review article is to fully expose the VUS issue as it relates to the cardiac channelopathies and make the cardiologists/geneticists/genetic counselors who order such genetic tests believers in genetic purgatory. Only then can one meaningfully attempt to get out of that place and seek to promote a VUS to disease-causative mutation status or demote it to an utterly innocuous and irrelevant variant.
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              2015 European Society of Cardiology Guidelines for the management of patients with ventricular arrhythmias and the prevention of sudden cardiac death summarized by co-chairs.

              The present European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Guidelines is a European update to the 2006 European/American guidelines for the management of patients with ventricular arrhythmias (VA) and the prevention of sudden cardiac death (SCD). The update is timely considering new insights into the natural history of diseases predisposing to SCD especially for younger individuals and also with the completion of major trials that have impacted management strategies for heart failure (HF).
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                EBioMedicine
                EBioMedicine
                EBioMedicine
                Elsevier
                2352-3964
                05 April 2020
                April 2020
                05 April 2020
                : 54
                : 102732
                Affiliations
                [a ]Cardiovascular Genetics Center, University of Girona-IDIBGI, C/ Dr Castany s/n, Parc Hospitalari Martí i Julià (M-2), 17190 Salt (Girona), Spain
                [b ]Medical Science Department, School of Medicine, University of Girona, Girona, Spain
                [c ]Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red en Enfermedades Cardiovasculares (CIBERCV), Madrid, Spain
                [d ]Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics Department, Hospital Clinic, University of Barcelona-IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain
                [e ]Arrhythmias Unit, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
                [f ]Arrhythmias Unit, Hospital Clinic, University of Barcelona-IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain
                [g ]Medicine Department, School of Medicine, Cadiz, Spain
                [h ]Cardiology Service, Hospital Josep Trueta, University of Girona, Girona, Spain
                [i ]Section Legal Medicine, Institute of Public Health, Catholic University, Rome, Italy
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding authors at: Cardiovascular Genetics Center, Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica Girona (IDIBGI), C/ Dr Castany s/n, Parc Hospitalari Martí i Julià (M-2), 17190 Salt –Girona, Spain. oscar@ 123456brugada.org ramon@ 123456brugada.org
                [1]

                Both authors equally contributed.

                Article
                S2352-3964(20)30107-9 102732
                10.1016/j.ebiom.2020.102732
                7136601
                32268277
                ce00afce-a625-43e0-822f-850392e7d61d
                © 2020 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 24 January 2020
                : 11 February 2020
                : 5 March 2020
                Categories
                Research paper

                sudden cardiac death,arrhythmias,pathogenicity,genetics
                sudden cardiac death, arrhythmias, pathogenicity, genetics

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