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Personal Cancer Genome Reporter (PCGR)

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Overview

The Personal Cancer Genome Reporter (PCGR) is a stand-alone software package for functional annotation and translation of individual tumor genomes for precision cancer medicine. It interprets primarily somatic SNVs/InDels and copy number aberrations, and has additional support for interpretation of bulk RNA-seq expression data. The software classifies variants both with respect to oncogenicity, and actionability. Interactive HTML output reports allow the user to interrogate the clinical impact of the molecular findings in an individual tumor.

  • Variant classification
    • according to oncogenicity: evaluating the oncogenic potential of somatic DNA aberrations (VICC/CGC/ClinGen guidelines)
    • according to actionability: mapping the therapeutic, diagnostic, and prognostic implications of somatic DNA aberrations (AMP/ASCO/CAP guidelines)
  • Tumor mutational burden (TMB) estimation
  • Mutational signature analysis
  • Microsatellite instability (MSI) classification
  • RNA-seq support - gene expression outlier detection, sample similarity analysis, and immune contexture profiling

PCGR supports both of the most recent human genome assemblies (GRCh37/GRCh38), and accepts variant calls from both tumor-control and tumor-only sequencing assays. Much of the functionality is intended for whole-exome/whole-genome sequencing assays, but you can also apply PCGR to output from targeted sequencing panels. If you are interested in the interrogation of germline variants and their relation to cancer predisposition, we recommend trying the accompanying tool Cancer Predisposition Sequencing Reporter (CPSR).

Example screenshots from the quarto-based cancer genome report by PCGR:

PCGR screenshot 1 PCGR screenshot 2 PCGR screenshot 3

PCGR originates from the Norwegian Cancer Genomics Consortium (NCGC), at the Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University Hospital, Norway.

Top News

  • October 21st 2024: 2.1.2 release

  • October 11th 2024: 2.1.1 release

    • patch to fix bug with parsing of relative CDS start positions
    • CHANGELOG
  • September 29th 2024: 2.1.0 release

    • updated bundle, more oncogenic variants, CNA visualization, improved RNA-seq support, bug fixes, and more
    • CHANGELOG
  • August 1st 2024: 2.0.3 release

    • patch to fix purity/ploidy propagation, MAF output for tumor-only runs, and other minor issues
    • CHANGELOG
  • July 16th 2024: 2.0.2 release

    • patch to ensure correct reference to actionability guidelines
    • CHANGELOG
  • July 7th 2024: 2.0.1 release

    • patch with bug fix for mitochondrial input variants (pr245)
    • CHANGELOG
  • June 2024: 2.0.0 release

    • Details in CHANGELOG
    • Massive reference data bundle upgrade, new report layout, oncogenicity classification
    • Support for Singularity/Apptainer
    • Major data/software updates:
      • Ensembl VEP v112
      • ClinVar (2024-06)
      • CIViC (2024-06-21)
      • GENCODE v46/v19 (GRCh38/GRCh37)
      • CancerMine v50 (2023-03)
      • UniProt KB v2024_03

Example reports

DOI

Why use PCGR?

The great complexity of acquired mutations in individual tumor genomes poses a severe challenge for clinical interpretation. PCGR aims to be a comprehensive reporting platform that can

  • systematically interrogate tumor-specific variants in the context of known therapeutic, diagnostic, and prognostic biomarkers
  • highlight genomic aberrations with likely oncogenic potential
  • provide a structured and concise summary of the most relevant findings
  • present the results in a format accessible to clinical experts

PCGR integrates a comprehensive set of knowledge resources related to tumor biology and therapeutic biomarkers, both at the gene, and at the level of individual variants. The software generates a comprehensive molecular interpretation report that supports the translation of individual cancer genomes towards molecularly guided treatment strategies.

Getting started

Citation

If you use PCGR or CPSR, please cite our publications:

Sigve Nakken, Ghislain Fournous, Daniel Vodák, Lars Birger Aaasheim, Ola Myklebost, and Eivind Hovig. Personal Cancer Genome Reporter: variant interpretation report for precision oncology (2017). Bioinformatics. 34(10):1778--1780. doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx817

Sigve Nakken, Vladislav Saveliev, Oliver Hofmann, Pål Møller, Ola Myklebost, and Eivind Hovig. Cancer Predisposition Sequencing Reporter (CPSR): a flexible variant report engine for high-throughput germline screening in cancer (2021). Int J Cancer. [doi:10.1002/ijc.33749](https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.33749)

Contact

sigven AT ifi.uio.no