ClinVar Notes
This section contains notes regarding ClinVar and its integration into VarFish. It outlines issues with the interpretation of variants as well as their resolution in VarFish and the rationale for the taken decisions.
ClinVar entries have two major labels:
- variant assertion
The assertion about the pathogenicity of a variant, e.g., likely benign or pathogenic.
- review status
A grading of how well a variant is reviewed. This is shown as a star rating on the ClinVar website.
Some reference ClinVar records (RVC identifiers) refer to one submission (SCV identifiers). Multiple reference ClinVar records are summarised in variant ClinVar records (VCV identifiers).
Review Status Interpretation
The interpretation of the status of a ClinVar record can be challenging. This is caused by two points.
Overall, there are the following occurences in ClinVar of clinvar assertion (June 4, 2020). Note that some only make sense together with the others (e.g., “no conflicts” only makes sense if there is more than one submission).
Count |
ClinVar Status |
---|---|
12,342 |
conflicting interpretations |
839,966 |
criteria provided |
55,467 |
multiple submitters |
71,858 |
no assertion criteria provided |
17,068 |
no assertion provided |
55,467 |
no conflicts |
5,751 |
practice guideline |
11,172 |
reviewed by expert panel |
772,157 |
single submitter |
In ClinVar the star ratings are assigned as follows
Stars |
Description |
---|---|
none |
no assertion criteria provided OR single submitter, no assertion provided |
one |
single submitter, criteria provided OR criteria provided & multiple submitters, conflicting interpretations |
two |
criteria provided, multiple submitters, no conflicts |
three |
reviewed by expert panel |
four |
practice guideline |
In particular, the missing distinction between “no assertion criteria provided” and “no assertion provided” is misleading. Also, it can be misleading that records with an assertion criteria override those without. In several records, good literature has been curated without an assertion criteria while many records from clinical testing companies have an assertion criteria but no phenotype and less diligence has been made as with good research.
Merging of ClinVar Records
The algorithm for merging multiple records in ClinVar to display the VCV records is not public. Also, given the issues with ClinVar’s star rating from above, VarFish uses a modified display from ClinVar’s. Instead of ClinVar’s gold stars, VarFish assigns points.
Points |
Condition |
---|---|
none |
origin is somatic OR no assertion provided |
one |
single submitter OR multiple submitters, conflicting interpretations |
two |
multiple submitters, no conflicting interpretation |
three |
reviewed by expert panel OR practice guideline |
Importantly, Varfish will still display all ClinVar records in the variant display and link out to ClinVar so the user can make their own assessment. The role of ClinVar in VarFish is to assist the user in quickly find variants present in ClinVar and not to override the user in any way.
The rationale:
ClinVar entries for somatic variants and those without a variant assessment are of little interest.
Multiple submitters are better than one submitter, regardless of the assertion criteria. Requiring assertion criteria or expert panel status is good for ClinVar to foster submission of assertion criteria or applications for expert panels but less important for VarFish users.
Variants for practice guideline are less important for VarFish’s use case. Thus, collapsing them with “reviewed by expert panel” should not make a problem.
VarFish merges ClinVar records based on the following algorithm.
Generally, benign and likely benign is merged to likely benign/benign, same for pathogenic and likely pathogenic. Records with uncertain significance are ignored in merging if there is at least one (likely) benign/pathogenic assessment.
Records flagged with practice guideline or expert panel will be assigned three points and override any other assessment. Within three point variants, practice guideline beat expert panel.
In the case that there is only one record, that record’s assessment is used. Note that this will include RCV records in ClinVar that are already merged. Assign one point.
In the case of two or more records:
Ignore uncertain significance records as outlined in (0).
If there are conflicting interpretations, mark the record as such.
Otherwise, merge likely and non-likely assertions and add no conflicting interpretation if more than one non-uncertain significance record.
Assign one point in case of conflicts and two points in case of consistency.
Further, each variant is annotated with an ACMG-style rating. In the case of having an “likely X/X” assertion, ACMG:1.5 or ACMG:4.5 is assigned. In the case of conflicting assertions, an ACMG score of 3 is assigned but the variant is flagged with a “C” to indicate conflicting interpretations. Note that uncertain vs. benign does not create a conflict as well as uncertain vs. pathogenic.
Examples
- INPUT
practice guideline, likely pathogenic
reviewed by expert panel, likely pathogenic
single submitter, pathogenic
- OUTPUT
reviewed by expert panel, likely pathogenic
three points; ACMG:4-LP
- INPUT
single submitter, pathogenic
multiple submitters, no conflict, likely pathogenic
- OUTPUT
multiple submitters, no conflict, likely pathogenic/pathogenic
two points; ACMG:4.5-LP-P
- INPUT
single submitter, pathogenic
single submitter, uncertain significance
single submitter, likely pathogenic
- OUTPUT
multiple submitters, no conflict, likely pathogenic/pathogenic
two points; ACMG:4.5-LP-P
- INPUT
single submitter, pathogenic
multiple submitters, uncertain significance
- OUTPUT
single submitter, likely pathogenic
one point; ACMG:4-LP
- INPUT
single submitter, pathogenic
multiple single submitters, likely benign
- OUTPUT
multiple submitters, conflicting interpretations, uncertain significance
one point; ACMG:3