| URL: | https://www.clinicalgenome.org/start/ |
| Full name: | Clinical Genome Resource |
| Description: | ClinGen (Clinical Genome Resource) is a NIH-funded consortium that curates and standardizes the clinical relevance of genes and genomic variants for use in precision medicine and research. It provides expert-reviewed evidence about gene-disease relationships, variant pathogenicity classifications, and dosage sensitivity information through structured curation processes. ClinGen develops frameworks like the gene-disease clinical validity classification system and variant pathogenicity guidelines, making its curated data publicly accessible through online databases to support clinical genetic testing and diagnosis. |
| Year founded: | 2013 |
| Last update: | 2023-07-01 |
| Version: | 1.0 |
| Accessibility: |
Accessible
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| Country/Region: | United States |
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| University/Institution: | none |
| Address: | NA |
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| Country/Region: | United States |
| Contact name (PI/Team): | ClinGen database |
| Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): | clingen@clinicalgenome.org |
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The Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen): Advancing genomic knowledge through global curation. [PMID: 39404758]
The Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) is a National Institutes of Health-funded program founded 10 years ago that defines the clinical relevance of genes and variants for medical and research use. ClinGen working groups develop standards for data sharing and curating genomic knowledge. Expert panels, with >2500 active members from 67 countries, curate the validity of monogenic disease relationships, pathogenicity of genetic variation, dosage sensitivity of genes, and actionability of gene-disease interventions using ClinGen standards, infrastructure, and curation interfaces. Results are available on clinicalgenome.org and classified variants are also submitted to ClinVar, a publicly available database hosted by the National Institutes of Health. As of January 2024, over 2700 genes have been curated (2420 gene-disease relationships for validity, 1557 genes for dosage sensitivity, and 447 gene-condition pairs for actionability), and 5161 unique variants have been classified for pathogenicity. New efforts are underway in somatic cancer, complex disease and pharmacogenomics, and a systematic approach to addressing justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. ClinGen's knowledge can be used to build evidence-based genetic testing panels, interpret copy-number variation, resolve discrepancies in variant classification, guide disclosure of genomic findings to patients, and assess new predictive algorithms. To get involved in ClinGen activities go to https://www.clinicalgenome.org/start. |
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ClinGen--the Clinical Genome Resource. [PMID: 26014595]
On autopsy, a patient is found to have hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The patient’s family pursues genetic testing that shows a “likely pathogenic” variant for the condition on the basis of a study in an original research publication. Given the dominant inheritance of the condition and the risk of sudden cardiac death, other family members are tested for the genetic variant to determine their risk. Several family members test negative and are told that they are not at risk for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and sudden cardiac death, and those who test positive are told that they need to be regularly monitored for cardiomyopathy on echocardiography. Five years later, during a routine clinic visit of one of the genotype-positive family members, the cardiologist queries a database for current knowledge on the genetic variant and discovers that the variant is now interpreted as “likely benign” by another laboratory that uses more recently derived population-frequency data. A newly available testing panel for additional genes that are implicated in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is initiated on an affected family member, and a different variant is found that is determined to be pathogenic. Family members are retested, and one member who previously tested negative is now found to be positive for this new variant. An immediate clinical workup detects evidence of cardiomyopathy, and an intracardiac defibrillator is implanted to reduce the risk of sudden cardiac death. |