Software-Assisted Manual Review of Clinical Next-Generation Sequencing Data

Clinical genomic tests increasingly use a next-generation sequencing (NGS) platform due in part to the high fidelity of variant calls, yet rare errors are still possible. In germline DNA screening, failure to correct such errors could have serious consequences for patients, who may follow an unwarranted screening or surgical management path. It has been suggested that routine orthogonal confirmation by Sanger sequencing is required to verify NGS results, especially low-confidence positives with depressed allele fraction (
Source: Journal of Molecular Diagnostics - Category: Pathology Authors: Tags: Regular article Source Type: research
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