Incidental copy-number variants identified by routine genome testing in a clinical population

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Abstract

Purpose:Mutational load of susceptibility variants has not been studied on a genomic scale in a clinical population, nor has the potential to identify these mutations as incidental findings during clinical testing been systematically ascertained.Methods:Array comparative genomic hybridization, a method for genome-wide detection of DNA copy-number variants, was performed clinically on DNA from 9,005 individuals. Copy-number variants encompassing or disrupting single genes were identified and analyzed for their potential to confer predisposition to dominant, adult-onset disease. Multigene copy-number variants affecting dominant, adult-onset cancer syndrome genes were also assessed.Results:In our cohort, 83 single-gene copy-number variants affected 40 unique genes associated with dominant, adult-onset disorders and unrelated to the patients' referring diagnoses (i.e., incidental) were found. Fourteen of these copy-number variants are likely disease-predisposing, 25 are likely benign, and 44 are of unknown clinical consequence. When incidental copy-number variants spanning up to 20 genes were considered, 27 copy-number variants affected 17 unique genes associated with dominant, adult-onset cancer predisposition.Conclusion:Copy-number variants potentially conferring susceptibility to adult-onset disease can be identified as incidental findings during routine genome-wide testing. Some of these mutations may be medically actionable, enabling disease surveillance or prevention; however, most incidentally observed single-gene copy-number variants are currently of unclear significance to the patient.Genet Med 2013:15(1):45-54. © American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics.

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Boone, P. M., Soens, Z. T., Campbell, I. M., Stankiewicz, P., Cheung, S. W., Patel, A., … Lupski, J. R. (2013). Incidental copy-number variants identified by routine genome testing in a clinical population. Genetics in Medicine, 15(1), 45–54. https://doi.org/10.1038/gim.2012.95

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