GeneVetter: a web tool for quantitative monogenic assessment of rare diseases

When performing DNA sequencing to diagnose affected individuals with monogenic forms of rare diseases, accurate attribution of causality to detected variants is imperative but imperfect. Even if a gene has variants already known to cause a disease, rare disruptive variants predicted to be causal are...

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Published inBioinformatics (Oxford, England) Vol. 31; no. 22; pp. 3682 - 3684
Main Authors Gillies, Christopher E., Robertson, Catherine C., Sampson, Matthew G., Kang, Hyun Min
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 15.11.2015
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ISSN1367-4803
1367-4811
DOI10.1093/bioinformatics/btv432

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Summary:When performing DNA sequencing to diagnose affected individuals with monogenic forms of rare diseases, accurate attribution of causality to detected variants is imperative but imperfect. Even if a gene has variants already known to cause a disease, rare disruptive variants predicted to be causal are not always so, mainly due to imperfect ability to predict the pathogenicity of variants. Existing population-scale sequence resources such as 1000 Genomes are useful to quantify the ‘background prevalence’ of an unaffected individual being falsely predicted to carry causal variants. We developed GeneVetter to allow users to quantify the ‘background prevalence’ of subjects with predicted causal variants within specific genes under user-specified filtering parameters. GeneVetter helps quantify uncertainty in monogenic diagnosis and design genetic studies with support for power and sample size calculations for specific genes with specific filtering criteria. GeneVetter also allows users to analyze their own sequence data without sending genotype information over the Internet. Overall, GeneVetter is an interactive web tool that facilitates quantifying and accounting for the background prevalence of predicted pathogenic variants in a population. Availability and Implementation:  GeneVetter is available at http://genevetter.org/ Contact:  mgsamps@med.umich.edu or hmkang@umich.edu Supplementary information:  Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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Associate Editor: John Hancock
ISSN:1367-4803
1367-4811
DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/btv432