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Clinical Research Staff and Protocol Coordinators

The Secondary Genomics Finding Service (SGFS) will annotate new and existing exome and genome sequencing data for the presence of actionable secondary findings. Participants with confirmed secondary findings will be offered genetic counseling to disclose these results with the SGFS genetic counselor. 

What's an actionable secondary finding and why return it?

  • Actionable secondary findings are generally unrelated to your primary research questions, but should be returned to participants
  • Currently, the American College of Medical Genetics recommends that variants in 59 genes be returned to people undergoing clinical sequencing - this is frequently referred to as the "ACMG list."
  • Secondary findings are genetic predispositions to treatable or preventable diseases that participants may not have been aware of - they have the potential to improve health outcomes for your participants and their families
  • Most participants, when asked, say that they would like to receive this kind of information.
Letters of A T C G

What does genetic counseling for secondary findings look like?

A very brief outline of the results return counseling session is:

  • Disclosure of result
  • Communication of recommendations for healthcare
  • Family history and risk assessment
  • Psychosocial assessment
  • Referral to appropriate provider near the patient's home
  • A genetic counseling letter and the result will be sent to the patient and a genetics consult will be entered into CRIS.
​Genetic Counseling FAQ | NHGRI

Key points to consider when submitting an application

1. Don't give participants a choice about receiving secondary findings if you intend to submit your exome data to us for annotation. We assume that every patient's data we review has consented to have their exome analyzed for these variants.

2. Consider characteristics about your cohort or an individual participant that might complicate the return of secondary variants and be honest about these complications when consenting participants (e.g., your cohort/participant is not English-speaking, lives outside the US, has little access to healthcare, or all three.)

  • Key points to consider when submitting an application

    1. Don't give participants a choice about receiving secondary findings if you intend to submit your exome data to us for annotation. We assume that every patient's data we review has consented to have their exome analyzed for these variants.

    2. Consider characteristics about your cohort or an individual participant that might complicate the return of secondary variants and be honest about these complications when consenting participants (e.g., your cohort/participant is not English-speaking, lives outside the US, has little access to healthcare, or all three.)

Confirmation of secondary variants

  • If a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant is identified in one of the SGFS genes then confirmation by Sanger sequencing will be offered.
  • A new DNA sample will be required. Saliva is strongly preferred; in rare instances a blood sample or previously isolated DNA can be accepted. DNA can be collected via a saliva sample kit mailed to the patient by an SGFS staff member.
  • Direct submission of previously isolated DNA may be acceptable but submission of a saliva sample is strongly preferred.
  • Direct submission of previously isolated DNA can only be accepted for confirmation of secondary findings if:
    1. There is documentation that the new sample and the original sample were collected at a different times (i.e. independently of one another)
    2. The new sample was processed in a CLIA certified lab. DNA from any other source cannot be processed for confirmation of secondary findings
  • Confirmation of secondary variants
    • If a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant is identified in one of the SGFS genes then confirmation by Sanger sequencing will be offered.
    • A new DNA sample will be required. Saliva is strongly preferred; in rare instances a blood sample or previously isolated DNA can be accepted. DNA can be collected via a saliva sample kit mailed to the patient by an SGFS staff member.
    • Direct submission of previously isolated DNA may be acceptable but submission of a saliva sample is strongly preferred.
    • Direct submission of previously isolated DNA can only be accepted for confirmation of secondary findings if:
      1. There is documentation that the new sample and the original sample were collected at a different times (i.e. independently of one another)
      2. The new sample was processed in a CLIA certified lab. DNA from any other source cannot be processed for confirmation of secondary findings

Ordering a confirmation test in CRIS

You are welcome to work with SGFS staff to obtain saliva collection kits to be mailed to participants who need to provide a confirmation sample. An ordering clinician from your team should use one of the following two CRIS orders to request confirmation testing in CRIS from a second DNA sample (see screenshot below as well):

A printout of this order must accompany sample submissions for confirmation testing. SGFS staff can help with this process.

  1. “Exome-Confirmation, Saliva, NHGRI”
  2. “Exome-Confirmation, Blood, NHGRI”
  • Ordering a confirmation test in CRIS

    You are welcome to work with SGFS staff to obtain saliva collection kits to be mailed to participants who need to provide a confirmation sample. An ordering clinician from your team should use one of the following two CRIS orders to request confirmation testing in CRIS from a second DNA sample (see screenshot below as well):

    A printout of this order must accompany sample submissions for confirmation testing. SGFS staff can help with this process.

    1. “Exome-Confirmation, Saliva, NHGRI”
    2. “Exome-Confirmation, Blood, NHGRI”

What about consent?

The SGFS staff has some suggestions based our experience working with research participants who will receive secondary findings as part of their participation in an NIH research study. Suggested language to incorporate into protocols and consent forms can be found here.

In our experience, the wait between told that there is a possible secondary finding and actually getting that finding confirmed can be very anxiety provoking. To mitigate this, the SGFS staff member who will contact your participant to coordinate getting a confirmatory sample will not know the participant's possible finding and will simply state that there is a potential genetic finding that your team would like to learn more about and that this will require submission of a new sample. When consenting participants, it may be helpful to emphasize that the participant may be re-contacted in the future to provide another sample for any number of reasons, not solely to confirm a potential secondary finding.

Practical points to emphasize during consent

  • The purpose of annotating for and returning secondary findings is to improve outcomes for participants - most participants are very comfortable with this idea, even if seems like initially unwelcome information
  • Secondary variants will only be present in a small fraction of your participants
  • Not having any secondary findings present does not mean that a person has a "clean genetic bill of health" - they can still get any of the diseases associated with the genes we look at in our analysis
  • Participants who have secondary findings will receive genetic counseling about what the finding means for them and their family members and what next steps to take.
  • What about consent?

    The SGFS staff has some suggestions based our experience working with research participants who will receive secondary findings as part of their participation in an NIH research study. Suggested language to incorporate into protocols and consent forms can be found here.

    In our experience, the wait between told that there is a possible secondary finding and actually getting that finding confirmed can be very anxiety provoking. To mitigate this, the SGFS staff member who will contact your participant to coordinate getting a confirmatory sample will not know the participant's possible finding and will simply state that there is a potential genetic finding that your team would like to learn more about and that this will require submission of a new sample. When consenting participants, it may be helpful to emphasize that the participant may be re-contacted in the future to provide another sample for any number of reasons, not solely to confirm a potential secondary finding.

    Practical points to emphasize during consent

    • The purpose of annotating for and returning secondary findings is to improve outcomes for participants - most participants are very comfortable with this idea, even if seems like initially unwelcome information
    • Secondary variants will only be present in a small fraction of your participants
    • Not having any secondary findings present does not mean that a person has a "clean genetic bill of health" - they can still get any of the diseases associated with the genes we look at in our analysis
    • Participants who have secondary findings will receive genetic counseling about what the finding means for them and their family members and what next steps to take.

Supplementary Documents

Genes Currently Annotated by SGFS for Secondary Findings

NIH Intramural Working Group on Secondary Findings
Background information on the rationale behind the development and implementation of the SGFS

NIH Intramural Policy for Secondary Findings from Next-Generation Sequencing Research

Darnell et al., 2016
Publication outlining a proposal for a centralized service to facilitate annotation and return of secondary genomic findings as part of the research enterprise

Kalia et al., 2017
Recommendations from the American College of Medical Genetics for the annotation and return of actionable secondary findings in clinical sequencing; contains the "ACMG 59 gene list"

 

Contact Julie Sapp for more information.

Last updated: May 18, 2022