1. BRCA Share: A Collection of Clinical BRCA Gene Variants
- Author
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Gwenaëlle Collod-Béroud, Narasimhan Nagan, Christine Toulas, Marcia Eisenberg, Crystal M. Buell, Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet, Stanley Letovsky, Hagay Sobol, Camille R. Nery, Céline Garrec, David Salgado, Corey D. Braastad, Danièle Muller, Charles M. Strom, Ghadi Rai, Olga M. Sinilnikova, Paul Vilquin, Angela Love, Christophe Béroud, Sandrine M. Caputo, Olivia Beaudoux, Yves-Jean Bignon, Florence Coulet, Myriam Bronner, Izabela Karbassi, Sarab Lizard, Dominique Vaur, Nicolas Derive, Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets, Françoise Révillion, Edwin Trautman, Christina DiVincenzo, Katelyn S. Weymouth, Nicolas Sevenet, Christopher Elzinga, Alecia Willis, and Claude Houdayer
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,endocrine system diseases ,Data curation ,MEDLINE ,Computational biology ,Human genetic variation ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Data sharing ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Resource (project management) ,Breast cancer ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,medicine ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
As next-generation sequencing increases access to human genetic variation, the challenge of determining clinical significance of variants becomes ever more acute. Germline variants in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes can confer substantial lifetime risk of breast and ovarian cancer. Assessment of variant pathogenicity is a vital part of clinical genetic testing for these genes. A database of clinical observations of BRCA variants is a critical resource in that process. This article describes BRCA Share™, a database created by a unique international alliance of academic centers and commercial testing laboratories. By integrating the content of the Universal Mutation Database generated by the French Unicancer Genetic Group with the testing results of two large commercial laboratories, Quest Diagnostics and Laboratory Corporation of America (LabCorp), BRCA Share™ has assembled one of the largest publicly accessible collections of BRCA variants currently available. Although access is available to academic researchers without charge, commercial participants in the project are required to pay a support fee and contribute their data. The fees fund the ongoing curation effort, as well as planned experiments to functionally characterize variants of uncertain significance. BRCA Share™ databases can therefore be considered as models of successful data sharing between private companies and the academic world.
- Published
- 2016