Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Identification of germline population variants misclassified as cancer-associated somatic variants

Frontiers in Medicine(2024)

Cited 0|Views7
No score
Abstract
IntroductionDatabases used for clinical interpretation in oncology rely on genetic data derived primarily from patients of European ancestry, leading to biases in cancer genetics research and clinical practice. One practical issue that arises in this context is the potential misclassification of multi-ancestral population variants as tumor-associated because they are not represented in reference genomes against which tumor sequencing data is aligned.MethodsTo systematically find misclassified variants, we compared somatic variants in census genes from the Catalogue of Somatic Mutations in Cancer (COSMIC) V99 with multi-ancestral population variants from the Genome Aggregation Databases’ Linkage Disequilibrium (GnomAD). By comparing genomic coordinates, reference, and alternate alleles, we could identify misclassified variants in genes associated with cancer.ResultsWe found 192 of 208 genes in COSMIC’s cancer-associated census genes (92.31%) to be associated with variant misclassifications. Among the 1,906,732 variants in COSMIC, 6,957 variants (0.36%) aligned with normal population variants in GnomAD, concerning for misclassification. The African / African American ancestral population included the greatest number of misclassified variants and also had the greatest number of unique misclassified variants.ConclusionThe direct, systematic comparison of variants from COSMIC for co-occurrence in GnomAD supports a more accurate interpretation of tumor sequencing data and reduces bias related to genomic ancestry.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined