Division of Genetics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Eur J Hum Genet. 2023 Nov;31(11):1237-1250. doi: 10.1038/s41431-023-01378-w. Epub 2023 Jul 18.
Nemaline myopathy (NM) is a heterogeneous genetic neuromuscular disorder characterized by rod bodies in muscle fibers resulting in multiple complications due to muscle weakness. NM patients and their families could benefit from genetic analysis for early diagnosis, carrier and prenatal testing; however, clinical classification of variants is subject to change as further information becomes available. Reclassification can significantly alter the clinical management of patients and their families. We used the newly published data and ACMG/AMP guidelines to reassess NM-associated variants previously reported by clinical laboratories (ClinVar). Our analyses on rare variants that were not canonical loss-of-function (LOF) resulted in the downgrading of ~29% (28/97) of variants from pathogenic or likely-pathogenic (P/LP) to variants of uncertain significance (VUS). In addition, we analyzed the splicing effect of variants identified in NM patients by clinical laboratories or research, using an accurate in silico prediction tool that applies a deep-learning network. We identified 55 rare variants that may impact splicing (cryptic splicing). We also analyzed six new NM families and identified eight variants in NEB and ACTA1, including three novel variants: homozygous pathogenic c.164A > G (p.Tyr55Cys), and homozygous likely pathogenic c.980T > C (p.Met327Thr) in ACTA1, and heterozygous VUS c.18694-3T > G in NEB. This study demonstrates the importance of reclassifying variants to facilitate more definitive "calls" on causality or no causality in clinical genetic testing of patients with NM. Reclassification of ~150 variants is now available for improved clinical management, risk counseling and screening of NM patients.
先天性肌营养不良(NM)是一种异质性遗传神经肌肉疾病,其特征是肌纤维中有棒状小体,导致肌肉无力,从而引发多种并发症。NM 患者及其家属可以通过基因分析进行早期诊断、携带者和产前检测从中受益;然而,随着更多信息的出现,对变异体的临床分类可能会发生变化。重新分类会显著改变患者及其家属的临床管理。我们使用新发布的数据和 ACMG/AMP 指南,重新评估了临床实验室(ClinVar)先前报告的与 NM 相关的变异体。我们对非典型缺失功能(LOF)的罕见变异体的分析导致约 29%(28/97)的变异体从致病性或可能致病性(P/LP)降级为意义不明的变异体(VUS)。此外,我们使用一种应用深度学习网络的准确的计算机预测工具,分析了临床实验室或研究中 NM 患者鉴定的变异体的剪接效应。我们确定了 55 个可能影响剪接(隐匿剪接)的罕见变异体。我们还分析了六个新的 NM 家族,并在 NEB 和 ACTA1 中鉴定了八个变异体,包括三个新变异体:ACTAl 中纯合致病性的 c.164A>G(p.Tyr55Cys)和纯合可能致病性的 c.980T>C(p.Met327Thr),以及 NEB 中杂合意义不明的变异体 c.18694-3T>G。这项研究表明,重新分类变异体对于促进 NM 患者临床基因检测中因果关系或无因果关系的更明确“判断”非常重要。现在有~150 个变异体可供重新分类,以改善 NM 患者的临床管理、风险咨询和筛查。