Abstract
Whole genome sequencing resolves clinical cases where standard diagnostic methods have failed. However, preliminary studies show that at least half of these cases still remain unresolved, even after whole genome sequencing. Structural variants (genomic variants larger than 50 base pairs) of uncertain significance may be the genetic cause of a portion of these unresolved cases. Historically, structural variants (SVs) have been difficult to detect with confidence from short-read sequencing. As both detection algorithms and long-read/linked-read sequencing methods become more accessible, clinical researchers will have access to thousands of reliable SVs of unknown disease relevance. Filtering these SVs by overlap with cataloged SVs is an imperfect solution. Innovative methods to predict the pathogenicity of these SVs will be needed to realize the full diagnostic potential of long-read sequencing. To address this emerging need, we developed StrVCTVRE (Structural Variant Classifier Trained on Variants Rare and Exonic), a classifier that can be used to distinguish pathogenic SVs from benign SVs that overlap exons. We made use of features that capture gene importance, coding region, conservation, expression, and exon structure in a random forest classifier. We found that some features, such as expression and conservation, are important but are absent from SV classification guidelines. Although databases of SVs reflect size biases from sequencing techniques, we leveraged multiple databases to construct a size-matched training set of rare, putatively benign and pathogenic SVs. In independent test sets, we found our method performs accurately across a wide SV size range, which will allow clinical researchers to eliminate nearly 60% of SVs from consideration at an elevated sensitivity of 90%. However, our method and its assessment are still constrained by a small training dataset and acquisition bias in databases of pathogenic variants. StrVCTVRE fills an empty niche in the clinical evaluation of SVs of unknown significance. We anticipate researchers will use it to prioritize SVs in patients where no variant is immediately compelling, empowering deeper investigation into novel SVs and disease genes to resolve cases.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Penultimate section of results was updated to incorporate valuable discussion with the authors of AnnotSV; Small changes were made throughout manuscript to reflect this update; Fig. 5b updated; Acknowledgements updated.