Bayesian approach to determining penetrance of pathogenic SDH variants.
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Authors
Benn, Diana E
Zhu, Ying
Andrews, Katrina A
Wilding, Mathilda
Duncan, Emma L
Dwight, Trisha
Tothill, Richard W
Burgess, John
Crook, Ashley
Gill, Anthony J
Hicks, Rodney J
Kim, Edward
Luxford, Catherine
Marfan, Helen
Richardson, Anne Louise
Robinson, Bruce
Schlosberg, Arran
Susman, Rachel
Tacon, Lyndal
Trainer, Alison
Tucker, Katherine
Field, Michael
Clifton-Bligh, Roderick J
Publication Date
2018-11Journal Title
J Med Genet
ISSN
0022-2593
Publisher
BMJ
Volume
55
Issue
11
Pages
729-734
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Benn, D. E., Zhu, Y., Andrews, K. A., Wilding, M., Duncan, E. L., Dwight, T., Tothill, R. W., et al. (2018). Bayesian approach to determining penetrance of pathogenic SDH variants.. J Med Genet, 55 (11), 729-734. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105427
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Until recently, determining penetrance required large observational cohort studies. Data from the Exome Aggregate Consortium (ExAC) allows a Bayesian approach to calculate penetrance, in that population frequencies of pathogenic germline variants should be inversely proportional to their penetrance for disease. We tested this hypothesis using data from two cohorts for succinate dehydrogenase subunits A, B and C (SDHA-C) genetic variants associated with hereditary pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma (PC/PGL). METHODS: Two cohorts were 575 unrelated Australian subjects and 1240 unrelated UK subjects, respectively, with PC/PGL in whom genetic testing had been performed. Penetrance of pathogenic SDHA-C variants was calculated by comparing allelic frequencies in cases versus controls from ExAC (removing those variants contributed by The Cancer Genome Atlas). RESULTS: Pathogenic SDHA-C variants were identified in 106 subjects (18.4%) in cohort 1 and 317 subjects (25.6%) in cohort 2. Of 94 different pathogenic variants from both cohorts (seven in SDHA, 75 in SDHB and 12 in SDHC), 13 are reported in ExAC (two in SDHA, nine in SDHB and two in SDHC) accounting for 21% of subjects with SDHA-C variants. Combining data from both cohorts, estimated lifetime disease penetrance was 22.0% (95% CI 15.2% to 30.9%) for SDHB variants, 8.3% (95% CI 3.5% to 18.5%) for SDHC variants and 1.7% (95% CI 0.8% to 3.8%) for SDHA variants. CONCLUSION: Pathogenic variants in SDHB are more penetrant than those in SDHC and SDHA. Our findings have important implications for counselling and surveillance of subjects carrying these pathogenic variants.
Keywords
paraganglioma, pathogenic variant, penetrance, pheochromocytoma, succinate dehydrogenase, Algorithms, Alleles, Australia, Bayes Theorem, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Genotype, Humans, Isoenzymes, Models, Genetic, Penetrance, Phenotype, Succinate Dehydrogenase, United Kingdom
Sponsorship
European Research Council (323004)
British Heart Foundation (None)
Department of Health (via National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)) (NF-SI-0616-10035)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105427
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/285384
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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