| URL: | http://www.opengenetics.ca |
| Full name: | Canadian Open Genetics Repository |
| Description: | The Canadian Open Genetics Repository is a collaborative effort for the collection, storage, sharing and robust analysis of variants reported by medical diagnostics laboratories across Canada. As clinical laboratories adopt modern genomics technologies, the need for this type of collaborative framework is increasingly important. |
| Year founded: | 2015 |
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| Accessibility: |
Accessible
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| Country/Region: | Canada |
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| University/Institution: | Canadian Open Genetics Repository |
| Address: | Canadian Open Genetics Repository, 700 University Avenue Ste. 8-400-6 Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 1X5 cogr@opengenetics.ca Author Information: Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto & Mount Sinai Hospital, 600 University Ave, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1X5 |
| City: | Toronto |
| Province/State: | Ontario |
| Country/Region: | Canada |
| Contact name (PI/Team): | Jordan Lerner-Ellis |
| Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): | jlerner-ellis@mtsinai.on.ca |
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Data sharing as a national quality improvement program: reporting on BRCA1 and BRCA2 variant-interpretation comparisons through the Canadian Open Genetics Repository (COGR). [PMID: 28726806]
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to develop a national program for Canadian diagnostic laboratories to compare DNA-variant interpretations and resolve discordant-variant classifications using the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes as a case study.MethodsBRCA1 and BRCA2 variant data were uploaded and shared through the Canadian Open Genetics Repository (COGR; http://www.opengenetics.ca). A total of 5,554 variant observations were submitted; classification differences were identified and comparison reports were sent to participating laboratories. Each site had the opportunity to reclassify variants. The data were analyzed before and after the comparison report process to track concordant- or discordant-variant classifications by three different models.ResultsVariant-discordance rates varied by classification model: 38.9% of variants were discordant when using a five-tier model, 26.7% with a three-tier model, and 5.0% with a two-tier model. After the comparison report process, the proportion of discordant variants dropped to 30.7% with the five-tier model, to 14.2% with the three-tier model, and to 0.9% using the two-tier model.ConclusionWe present a Canadian interinstitutional quality improvement program for DNA-variant interpretations. Sharing of variant knowledge by clinical diagnostic laboratories will allow clinicians and patients to make more informed decisions and lead to better patient outcomes.Genetics in Medicine advance online publication, 20 July 2017; doi:10.1038/gim.2017.80. |
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Canadian Open Genetics Repository (COGR): a unified clinical genomics database as a community resource for standardising and sharing genetic interpretations. [PMID: 25904639]
BACKGROUND: The Canadian Open Genetics Repository is a collaborative effort for the collection, storage, sharing and robust analysis of variants reported by medical diagnostics laboratories across Canada. As clinical laboratories adopt modern genomics technologies, the need for this type of collaborative framework is increasingly important. |