PVS1 null variant (nonsense, frameshift, canonical ±1 or 2 splice sites, initiation codon, single or multiexon deletion) in a gene where LOF is a known mechanism of disease
Caveats:
BA1 Allele frequency is >5% in Exome Sequencing Project, 1000 Genomes Project, or Exome Aggregation Consortium
PS1 Same amino acid change as a previously established pathogenic variant regardless of nucleotide change
Example: Val→Leu caused by either G>C or G>T in the same codon
Caveat: Beware of changes that impact splicing rather than at the amino acid/protein level
BS1 Allele frequency is greater than expected for disorder
PS2 De novo (both maternity and paternity confirmed) in a patient with the disease and no family history
Note: Confirmation of paternity only is insufficient. Egg donation, surrogate motherhood, errors in embryo transfer, and so on, can contribute to nonmaternity.
BS2 Observed in a healthy adult individual for a recessive (homozygous), dominant (heterozygous), or X-linked (hemizygous) disorder, with full penetrance expected at an early age
PS3 Well-established in vitro or in vivo functional studies supportive of a damaging effect on the gene or gene product
Note: Functional studies that have been validated and shown to be reproducible and robust in a clinical diagnostic laboratory setting are considered the most well established.
BS3 Well-established in vitro or in vivo functional studies show no damaging effect on protein function or splicing
PS4 The prevalence of the variant in affected individuals is significantly increased compared with the prevalence in controls
Note 1: Relative risk or OR, as obtained from case–control studies, is >5.0, and the confidence interval around the estimate of relative risk or OR does not include 1.0. See the article for detailed guidance.
Note 2: In instances of very rare variants where case–control studies may not reach statistical significance, the prior observation of the variant in multiple unrelated patients with the same phenotype, and its absence in controls, may be used as moderate level of evidence.
BS4 Lack of segregation in affected members of a family
Caveat: The presence of phenocopies for common phenotypes (i.e., cancer, epilepsy) can mimic lack of segregation among affected individuals. Also, families may have more than one pathogenic variant contributing to an autosomal dominant disorder, further confounding an apparent lack of segregation.
PM1 Located in a mutational hot spot and/or critical and well-established functional domain (e.g., active site of an enzyme) without benign variation
BP1 Missense variant in a gene for which primarily truncating variants are known to cause disease
PM2 Absent from controls (or at extremely low frequency if recessive) in Exome Sequencing Project, 1000 Genomes Project, or Exome Aggregation Consortium
BP2 Observed in trans with a pathogenic variant for a fully penetrant dominant gene/disorder or observed in cis with a pathogenic variant in any inheritance pattern
PM3 For recessive disorders, detected in trans with a pathogenic variant
Note: This requires testing of parents (or offspring) to determine phase
BP3 In-frame deletions/insertions in a repetitive region without a known function
PM4 Protein length changes as a result of in-frame deletions/insertions in a nonrepeat region or stop-loss variants
BP4 Multiple lines of computational evidence suggest no impact on gene or gene product (conservation, evolutionary, splicing impact, etc.)
Caveat: Because many in silico algorithms use the same or very similar input for their predictions, each algorithm cannot be counted as an independent criterion. BP4 can be used only once in any evaluation of a variant.
PM5 Novel missense change at an amino acid residue where a different missense change determined to be pathogenic has been seen before
Example: Arg156His is pathogenic; now you observe Arg156Cys
Caveat: Beware of changes that impact splicing rather than at the amino acid/protein level.
BP5 Variant found in a case with an alternate molecular basis for disease
PM6 Assumed de novo, but without confirmation of paternity and maternity
BP6 Reputable source recently reports variant as benign, but the evidence is not available to the laboratory to perform an independent evaluation
PP1 Cosegregation with disease in multiple affected family members in a gene definitively known to cause the disease
Note: May be used as stronger evidence with increasing segregation data
BP7 A synonymous (silent) variant for which splicing prediction algorithms predict no impact to the splice consensus sequence nor the creation of a new splice site AND the nucleotide is not highly conserved
PP2 Missense variant in a gene that has a low rate of benign missense variation and in which missense variants are a common mechanism of disease
PP3 Multiple lines of computational evidence support a deleterious effect on the gene or gene product (conservation, evolutionary, splicing impact, etc.)
Caveat: Because many in silico algorithms use the same or very similar input for their predictions, each algorithm should not be counted as an independent criterion. PP3 can be used only once in any evaluation of a variant.
PP4 Patient’s phenotype or family history is highly specific for a disease with a single genetic etiology
PP5 Reputable source recently reports variant as pathogenic, but the evidence is not available to the laboratory to perform an independent evaluation