Actionable Variants of Unknown Significance in Inherited Arrhythmogenic Syndromes: A Further Step Forward in Genetic Diagnosis

Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/35838
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines12112553
ISSN: 2227-9059
Ficheros
Estadísticas
Métricas y Citas
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es
Martínez Barrios, Estefanía; Greco, Andrea; Cruzalegui, José; Cesar, Sergi; Díez Escuté, Nuria; Cerralbo, Patricia; Chipa, Fredy; Zschaeck, Irene; Fogaça-da-Mata, Miguel; Diez López, Carles; Arbelo, Elena; Grassi, Simone; Oliva, Antonio; Toro Cebada, Rocío
; Sarquella Brugada, Georgia; Campuzano, Oscar
Fecha
2024-11-08Departamento/s
MedicinaFuente
Biomedicines, Vol. 12, Núm. 11, 2024Resumen
Background/Objectives: Inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes comprise a heterogenic
group of genetic entities that lead to malignant arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Genetic testing
has become crucial to understand the disease etiology and allow for the early identification of relatives
at risk; however, it requires an accurate interpretation of the data to achieve a clinically actionable
outcome. This is particularly challenging for the large number of rare variants obtained by current
high-throughput techniques, which are mostly classified as of unknown significance. Methods: In
this work, we present a new algorithm for the genetic interpretation of the remaining rare variants
in order to shed light on their potential clinical implications and reduce the burden of unknown
significance. Results: Our study illustrates the potential utility of our individualized comprehensive
stepwise analyses focused on the rare variants associated with IAS, which are currently classified as
ambiguous, to further determine their trends towards pathogenicity or benign traits. Conclusions:
We advocate for personalized disease-focused population frequency data and family segregation
analyses for all rare variants that remain ambiguous to further clarify their role. The current ambiguity
should not influence medical decisions, but a potential deleterious role would suggest a closer clinical
follow-up and frequent genetic data review for a more personalized clinical approach.
Materias
sudden cardiac death; inherited arrhythmogenic syndromes; genetics; clinical interpretation; variants of unknown significanceColecciones
- Artículos Científicos [11595]
- Artículos Científicos INIBICA [1046]
- Articulos Científicos Medicina [263]





