- This topic was initially scored prior to development of the process for making actionability assertions. The Actionability Working Group decided to defer making an assertion until after the topic could be reviewed through the update process.
Assertions and Scores
Actionability Assertions
| Gene | Condition (MONDO ID) | OMIM ID | Final Assertion |
|---|---|---|---|
| No assertions found. | |||
Actionability Assertion Rationale
Actionability Scores
| Outcome / Intervention Pair | Severity | Likelihood | Effectiveness | Nature of Intervention | Total Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No scores were found. | |||||
Severity of Outcome
Prevalence of the Genetic Condition
Di Minno MN, et al. (2015) PMID: 25784135, Committee on Practice Bulletins--Gynecology, et al. (2007) PMID: 17666620, Hereditary thrombophilia due to congenital protein S deficiency. Orphanet encyclopedia, ORPHA: 743., American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422, Varga EA, et al. (2012) PMID: 21707594
Clinical Features (Signs / symptoms)
Committee on Practice Bulletins--Gynecology, et al. (2007) PMID: 17666620, Hereditary thrombophilia due to congenital protein S deficiency. Orphanet encyclopedia, ORPHA: 743., American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422, Langlois NJ, et al. (2003) PMID: 12876621, Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2016) OMIM: 612336, Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2012) OMIM: 614514, Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2016) OMIM: 176880, Bates SM, et al. (2012) PMID: 22315276, James A, et al. (2011) PMID: 21860313
Natural History (Important subgroups & survival / recovery)
Di Minno MN, et al. (2015) PMID: 25784135, Committee on Practice Bulletins--Gynecology, et al. (2007) PMID: 17666620, Hereditary thrombophilia due to congenital protein S deficiency. Orphanet encyclopedia, ORPHA: 743., American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422, Meschia JF, et al. (2014) PMID: 25355838
Description of sources of evidence:
Likelihood of Outcome
Mode of Inheritance
In most cases Protein S deficiency is transmitted in an autosomal dominant manner; however, autosomal recessive Protein S deficiency may also occur, resulting in very low levels of active Protein S.
Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2016) OMIM: 612336, Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2012) OMIM: 614514
Prevalence of Genetic Variants
Penetrance (Includes any high-risk racial or ethnic subgroups)
Varga EA, et al. (2012) PMID: 21707594
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422
Bushnell C, et al. (2014) PMID: 24503673
Relative Risk (Includes any high-risk racial or ethnic subgroups)
Di Minno MN, et al. (2015) PMID: 25784135
Expressivity
Online Medelian Inheritance in Man. (2016) OMIM: 612336
Description of sources of evidence:
Intervention Effectiveness
Patient Management
Meschia JF, et al. (2014) PMID: 25355838
Einhaupl K, et al. (2010) PMID: 20402748, Bushnell C, et al. (2014) PMID: 24503673
Committee on Practice Bulletins--Gynecology, et al. (2007) PMID: 17666620
- Women with a prior VTE who are not receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy may undergo either antepartum surveillance without anticoagulation therapy or with prophylactic or intermediate-dose LMWH/UFH, but are recommended postpartum thromboprophylaxis.
- Pneumatic compression boots or elastic stockings should be considered during the intrapartum period until the patient is ambulatory postpartum. LMWH during pregnancy is estimated to reduce the number of VTE events from 20 per 1,000 women to 7 per 1,000 women (95% CI: 4 to 14 per 1,000) in women with protein S deficiency and a positive family history of VTE, with no significant increase in bleeding events. However, evidence about the relative effects of treatment is taken from a meta-analysis of thromboprophylaxis in patients undergoing hip arthroplasty and is rated by the guideline authors to be of low quality due to the indirectness of the population and imprecision in the baseline risk estimates for women with thrombophilias.
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422, James A, et al. (2011) PMID: 21860313, (2010) URL: www.sign.ac.uk., (2015) URL: www.rcog.org.uk.
Surveillance
Circumstances to Avoid
Committee on Practice Bulletins-Gynecology, et al. (2012) PMID: 22914492
Description of sources of evidence:
Nature of Intervention
Nature of Intervention
James A, et al. (2011) PMID: 21860313
Chance to Escape Clinical Detection
Committee on Practice Bulletins--Gynecology, et al. (2007) PMID: 17666620, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Women's Health Care Physicians, et al. (2013) PMID: 23963422, James A, et al. (2011) PMID: 21860313, Bushnell C, et al. (2014) PMID: 24503673, (2010) URL: www.sign.ac.uk., (2015) URL: www.rcog.org.uk.
Description of sources of evidence:
Gene Condition Association
| Gene | Condition Associations | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OMIM Identifier | Primary MONDO Identifier | Additional MONDO Identifiers | |||
References List
(2013) ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 138: Inherited thrombophilias in pregnancy. Obstetrics and gynecology. 122(3):706-17.
(2012) VTE, thrombophilia, antithrombotic therapy, and pregnancy: Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines. Chest. 141(2 Suppl):e691S-736S.
(2014) Guidelines for the prevention of stroke in women: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. 45(5):1545-88.
(2007) ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 84: Prevention of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Obstetrics and gynecology. 110(2 Pt 1):429-40.
(2015) Natural anticoagulants deficiency and the risk of venous thromboembolism: a meta-analysis of observational studies. Thrombosis research. 135(5):923-32.
(2010) EFNS guideline on the treatment of cerebral venous and sinus thrombosis in adult patients. European journal of neurology. 17(10):1229-35.
Hereditary thrombophilia due to congenital protein S deficiency. Orphanet encyclopedia, http://www.orpha.net/consor/cgi-bin/OC_Exp.php?lng=en&Expert=743
(2011) Practice bulletin no. 123: thromboembolism in pregnancy. Obstetrics and gynecology. 118(3):718-29.
(2003) Risk of venous thromboembolism in relatives of symptomatic probands with thrombophilia: a systematic review. Thrombosis and haemostasis. 90(1):17-26.
(2014) Guidelines for the primary prevention of stroke: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. 45(12):3754-832.
Prevention and management of venous thromboembolism. SIGN publication no. 122.. (2010) Accessed: 2017-07-21. URL: http://www.sign.ac.uk/assets/qrg122.pdf
PROTEIN S; PROS1. Online Medelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM®. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. MIM: 176880, (2016) World Wide Web URL: http://omim.org/
Reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism during pregnancy and the puerperium. (2015) Accessed: 2017-07-21. URL: https://www.rcog.org.uk/en/guidelines-research-services/guidelines/gtg37a/
THROMBOPHILIA DUE TO PROTEIN S DEFICIENCY, AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT; THPH5. Online Medelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM®. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. MIM: 612336, (2016) World Wide Web URL: http://omim.org/
THROMBOPHILIA DUE TO PROTEIN S DEFICIENCY, AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE; THPH6. Online Medelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM®. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. MIM: 614514, (2012) World Wide Web URL: http://omim.org/
Early Rule-Out
Early Rule-Out Summary
Findings of Early Rule-Out Assessment
- Is there a qualifying resource, such as a practice guideline or systematic review, for the genetic condition?
- Does the practice guideline or systematic review indicate that the result is actionable in one or more of the following ways?
- Is it actionable in an undiagnosed adult with the condition?
- Is this condition an important health problem?
- Is there at least on known pathogenic variant with at least moderate penetrance (≥40%) or moderate relative risk (≥2) in any population?
a. Patient Management
b. Surveillance or Screening
c. Circumstances to Avoid