Melo Mafalda, Ribeiro Mariana, Silva Paulo Filipe, Valente Susana, Alves Filipe, Venâncio Margarida, Sequeiros Jorge, Freixo João Parente, Antunes Diana, Oliveira Jorge
Medical Genetics Unit, Hospital Dona Estefânia, Unidade Local de Saúde de Sao José, 1169-045 Lisbon, Portugal.
Centre for Predictive and Preventive Genetics, Institute for Molecular and Cell Biology (CGPP-IBMC), 4200-135 Porto, Portugal.
Int J Mol Sci. 2025 Apr 9;26(8):3509. doi: 10.3390/ijms26083509.
The application of whole-exome sequencing (WES) for diagnostic purposes has the potential to unravel secondary findings unrelated with the primary reason of testing. Some of those might be of high clinical utility and comprise disease-causing variants in genes, related to life-threatening and clinically actionable diseases. Clarifying the allelic frequencies of such variants in specific populations is a crucial step for the large-scale deployment of genomic medicine. We analysed medically relevant variants in the 81 genes from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) v3.2 list of actionable loci, using WES data from a diagnostic laboratory cohort of 3972 persons, tentatively resampled to represent the Portuguese population geographic distribution. We identified medically actionable variants in 6.2% of our cohort, distributed across several disease domains: cardiovascular disorders (3.0%), cancer predisposition (2.0%), miscellaneous disorders (1.1%), and metabolic disorders (0.1%). Additionally, we estimated a frequency of heterozygotes for recessive disease alleles of 11.1%. Overall, our results suggest that medically actionable findings can be identified in approximately 6.2% of persons from our population. This is the first study estimating medically actionable findings in Portugal. These results provide valuable insight for patients, healthcare providers, and policymakers involved in advancing genomic medicine at the national and international level.
将全外显子组测序(WES)用于诊断目的,有可能揭示与检测的主要原因无关的次要发现。其中一些发现可能具有很高的临床实用性,包括与危及生命且临床上可采取行动的疾病相关的基因致病变异。明确这些变异在特定人群中的等位基因频率,是基因组医学大规模应用的关键一步。我们使用来自一个3972人的诊断实验室队列的WES数据,对美国医学遗传学与基因组学学会(ACMG)v3.2可操作位点列表中的81个基因进行了医学相关变异分析,并对这些数据进行了初步重采样,以代表葡萄牙人群的地理分布。我们在6.2%的队列中鉴定出了具有医学可操作性的变异,这些变异分布在多个疾病领域:心血管疾病(3.0%)、癌症易感性(2.0%)、其他疾病(1.1%)和代谢紊乱(0.1%)。此外,我们估计隐性疾病等位基因杂合子的频率为11.1%。总体而言,我们的结果表明,在我们的人群中,约6.2%的人可以发现具有医学可操作性的发现。这是第一项评估葡萄牙人群中具有医学可操作性发现的研究。这些结果为参与国家和国际层面推进基因组医学的患者、医疗服务提供者和政策制定者提供了有价值的见解。