PMC Hereditary Renal/Urinary Tract Cancers Panel

Up to 31 genes Turn around Time: 10 business days
Order a Kit:

Testing Kit Request Form

New Provider:

Please fill out the form:
Provider Registration Form

Contact:

info@pmcdx.com

Test Description

PMC Hereditary Renal/Urinary Tract Cancers Panel examines genes linked to an increased risk of kidney and urinary tract cancer. Due to overlapping clinical features of hereditary susceptibility conditions| utilizing a comprehensive panel test enables a thorough evaluation of potential genes for individuals with similar clinical symptoms. Some genes included in this panel may also be associated with conditions unrelated to the clinical indication for testing. This test specifically targets heritable germline mutations and is not designed for detecting somatic mutations in tumor tissue.

  • Associated Conditions
    • Adrenocortical carcinoma
    • Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome
    • BAP1 tumor predisposition syndrome
    • Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
    • Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) syndrome
    • Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome
    • Bloom syndrome
  • Methodology

    Targeted Exome/ Slice Exome (Next Generation Sequencing including Copy Number Variation)

  • Assay Information
    • MAX: Sequencing analysis for exons 2 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
    • SDHA: Deletion/duplication analysis is not offered for this gene and sequencing analysis is not offered for exon 14. Sequencing analysis for exons 6-8 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
    • MLH1: Deletion/duplication analysis covers the promoter region. Sequencing analysis for exons 12 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
    • MSH6: Sequencing analysis for exons 7| 10 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
    • DICER1: Sequencing analysis for exons 22 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
    • TP53: Deletion/duplication analysis covers the promoter region.
    • FH: Sequencing analysis for exons 9 includes only cds +/- 10 bp.
  • Limitations

    All sequencing technologies have limitations. A negative result from this analysis does not rule out a possible genetic diagnosis as some variants may not be detected by this test. This test is not designed to detect low level mosaicism, structural rearrangements, indels >40bp, deep intronic variants of unknown clinical significance, or large cytogenetic CNVs. Certain inherent qualities of the human genome, for example repetitive regions/homopolymers, GC rich, pseudogenes, and rare polymorphisms, pose significant technical challenges such as sequence misalignment that may potentially impact the accuracy of the results. False negative results may also occur in the setting of allogeneic bone marrow, stem cell transplantation, active or chronic hematologic conditions, recent blood transfusions, suboptimal DNA quality or PCR trace contamination. Other potential sources of error include sample mix-ups and clerical issues.

  • References
    • 1. Richards S et al. Genetics in medicine. Standards and guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants: a joint consensus recommendation of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and the Association for Molecular Pathology. 2015 May;17(5):405-24 (PMID: 25741868)
    • 2. GnomAD (gnomAD)
    • 3. CSPEC (ClinGen variant classification rules registry) Criteria Specification Registry
    • 4. Normal copy number variation in healthy individuals database of genomic variants: http://dgv.tcag.ca/dgv/app/home
  • Tagged Genes

    Primary panel:

    31 genes selected