INVESTIGADORES
DALAMON Viviana Karina
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
GJB2 and GJB6 genetic variant curation in a non-syndromic hearing loss cohort from Argentina?
Autor/es:
BUONFIGLIO PAULA; BRUQUE CARLOS DAVID; MENAZZI SEBASTIAN; FRANCIPANE, LILIANA; LOTERSZTEIN, VANESA; ANA BELEN ELGOYHEN; DALAMÓN, VIVIANA KARINA
Lugar:
Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Reunión:
Congreso; Reunión Conjunta SAIC. SAI. AAFE. NANOMED-AR; 2021
Institución organizadora:
Sociedad Argentina de Investigacion Clinica- SAIC
Resumen:
Hereditary hearing impairment affects 1-500 newborn children. It ischaracterized by the large number of genes involved (more than100) and its phenotype heterogeneity. Despite the wide genetic varietyof hearing impairment, the most commonly mutated genes in severeto profound autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing lossare GJB2 and GJB6, accounting for nearly 50% of the cases in mostpopulations around the Mediterranean Sea. Molecular diagnosis enablesproper genetic counseling and medical prognosis to patients.Therefore, correct interpretation of the phenotypic consequences ofgenetic variants is crucial in genetic diagnosis, since discrepanciesin sequence variant interpretation and classification has been reportedto lead to serious impact in patient health maintenance.In thisstudy we aimed to identify the genetic causes of hearing loss andperformed a manual genetic variant curation following the AmericanCollege of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for MolecularPathology ACMG/AMP standards and hearing- Hereditary hearing impairment affects 1-500 newborn children. It ischaracterized by the large number of genes involved (more than100) and its phenotype heterogeneity. Despite the wide genetic varietyof hearing impairment, the most commonly mutated genes in severeto profound autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing lossare GJB2 and GJB6, accounting for nearly 50% of the cases in mostpopulations around the Mediterranean Sea. Molecular diagnosis enablesproper genetic counseling and medical prognosis to patients.Therefore, correct interpretation of the phenotypic consequences ofgenetic variants is crucial in genetic diagnosis, since discrepanciesin sequence variant interpretation and classification has been reportedto lead to serious impact in patient health maintenance.In thisstudy we aimed to identify the genetic causes of hearing loss andperformed a manual genetic variant curation following the AmericanCollege of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for MolecularPathology ACMG/AMP standards and hearing-