HGMD Professional 2024.1 is now available, expanding the world’s largest collection of human inherited disease mutations to 510,804 entries—that’s 6,796 more than the previous release.
For over 30 years, HGMD Professional has been used worldwide by researchers, clinicians, diagnostic laboratories and genetic counselors as an essential tool for the annotation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data in routine clinical and translational research. Founded and maintained by the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University, HGMD Professional provides users with a unique resource containing expert-curated mutations all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
HGMD Professional is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of NGS data.
Figure 1. Mutation entries in HGMD Professional 2024.1. The number of inherited disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled since 2015.
View the complete HGMD Professional 2024.1 statistics, below.
Unlike new machine learning or artificial intelligence platforms that rapidly index millions of journal articles for mutations, HGMD Professional leverages human judgement and expertise—every catalogued mutation has been “touched” by a trained scientist to ensure accuracy, relevance, and context.
Learn more about the industry-leading database here, where you can explore features, watch videos, and request a complimentary 5-day trial.
The fall 2023 release of the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) Professional is now available, adding 12,617 new entries to the world's largest collection of human inherited disease mutations. In total, HGMD Pro 2023.3 now contains 456,702 expert-curated mutations.
Four times a year, the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University releases new updates to its market-leading database, ensuring that clinical geneticists always have access to the most current and comprehensive collection of expert-curated germline mutations. This, in turn, safeguards patients from misinterpretations and misdiagnoses.
In our most recent white paper, we share a real-life story that underscores the critical importance of precision and accuracy in clinical diagnostics. The case revolves around a 2-year-old experiencing seizures and muscle twitches whose family experienced deep emotional turbulence after her diagnostic Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) test was misinterpreted. If you'd like to explore the case further and understand how HGMD Professional could have could have played a pivotal role, we invite you to read the complete white paper here.
HGMD Professional is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of NGS data.
Figure 1. Mutation entries in HGMD Professional 2023.3. The number of inherited disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled since 2010 (within 10 years).
View the complete HGMD Professional 2023.3 statistics, below.
Unlike new machine learning or artificial intelligence platforms that rapidly index millions of journal articles for mutations, HGMD Professional leverages human judgement and expertise—every catalogued mutation has been “touched” by a trained scientist to ensure accuracy, relevance, and context.
Learn more about the industry-leading database here, where you can explore features, watch videos, and request a complimentary 5-day trial.
The summer 2023 release of HGMD Professional is now available—and with 33,342 new entries in just 3 months, it's an impressive expansion of the world's largest collection of human inherited disease mutations. In total, HGMD Pro 2023.2 now contains 444,085 entries.
For over 30 years, HGMD Professional has been used worldwide by researchers, clinicians, diagnostic laboratories and genetic counselors as an essential tool for the annotation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data in routine clinical and translational research. Founded and maintained by the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University, HGMD Professional provides users with a unique resource containing expert-curated mutations all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
HGMD Professional is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of NGS data.
Figure 1. Mutation entries in HGMD Professional 2023.2. The number of inherited disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled since 2010 (within 10 years).
View the complete HGMD Professional 2023.2 statistics, below.
Unlike new machine learning or artificial intelligence platforms that rapidly index millions of journal articles for mutations, HGMD Professional leverages human judgement and expertise—every catalogued mutation has been “touched” by a trained scientist to ensure accuracy, relevance, and context.
Learn more about the industry-leading database here, where you can explore features, watch videos, and request a complimentary 5-day trial.
HGMD Professional 2021.4 is now available, expanding the world’s largest collection of human inherited disease mutations to 352,731 entries–that’s 8,719 more than the previous release.
For over 30 years, HGMD Professional has been used worldwide by researchers, clinicians, diagnostic laboratories and genetic counselors as an essential tool for the annotation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data in routine clinical and translational research. Founded and maintained by the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University, HGMD Professional provides users with a unique resource containing expert-curated mutations all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
detailed mutation reports
new mutation entries in 2021 alone
summary reports listing all known
inherited disease mutations
HGMD Professional is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of NGS data.
View the complete HGMD Professional 2021.4 statistics here.
In an on-demand webinar, our experts discuss how you can streamline your variant classification workflows with HGMD Professional through real-world examples.
Unlike new machine learning or artificial intelligence platforms that rapidly index millions of journal articles for mutations, HGMD Professional leverages human judgement and expertise—every catalogued mutation has been “touched” by a trained scientist to ensure accuracy, relevance, and context.
Learn more about the industry-leading database here, where you can explore features, watch videos, and request a complimentary 5-day trial.
The Winter 2020 Release of the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) Professional is available, expanding the world’s largest collection of human inherited disease mutations to 307,366 entries–that’s 8,957 more than the previous release.
For over 30 years, HGMD Professional has been used worldwide by researchers, clinicians, diagnostic laboratories and genetic counselors as an essential tool for the annotation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data in routine clinical and translational research. Founded and maintained by the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University, HGMD Professional provides users with a unique resource containing expert-curated mutations all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
Whether searching for an overview of known mutations associated with a particular disease, interpreting clinical test results, looking for the likely causal mutation in a list of variants, or seeking to integrate mutation content into your custom NGS pipeline or data repository—HGMD is the defacto-standard repository for heritable mutations that can be adapted to a broad range of applications.
detailed mutation reports
new mutation entries in 2020 alone
summary reports listing all known
inherited disease mutations
We have updated the reference sequences utilized by HGMD to annotation release 109.20200817 on GRCh38.p13 (RefSeq data freeze 2020/08/17).
HGMD is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data.
View the complete HGMD Professional statistics here.
Read more about the importance of having access to the most up-to-date and comprehensive database for human disease mutations in our white paper.
HGMD Professional helps clinical testing labs analyze and annotate next-generation sequencing (NGS) data with current and trusted information. Unlike other mutation databases, HGMD mutations are all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
To get the most out of your HGMD Professional subscription, visit our Resources webpage for case studies, technical notes, and video tutorials
HGMD on-demand webinar
In our latest on-demand webinar, you will discover the power of HGMD Professional and see why reference labs around the world, such as LabCorp and Genomics England, use HGMD Professional in their clinical test interpretation. Through a live demonstration, you will learn how to use the online interface and downloadable database, as well as how to use HGMD Professional and ANNOVAR to produce a powerful in-house variant interpretation solution.
Watch the webinar here.
The dbNSFP v4.1 is available in ANNOVAR for annotation on hg19 and hg38 coordinate (keyword dbnsfp41a is for academic use, dbnsfp41c is for commercial use). You can learn more about ANNOVAR here.
Genome Trax™ 2020.4 is now available. Updated tracks have been released with HGMD 2020.4 content for all HGMD-related tracks. Additional major updates include Genome Trax release 2020.4, and PROTEOME™ release 2020.4. Please refer to GeneXplain for updated release notes on Transfac™ and PROTEOME™.
For labs looking to generate clinician-grade reports for germline or somatic NGS testing, QIAGEN Clinical Insight (QCI) Interpret reproducibly translates highly complex NGS data into standardized reports using current clinical evidence from the QIAGEN Knowledge Base, which consists of over 40 public and proprietary databases, including HGMD Professional.
Click here for a free demonstration of QCI Interpret.
The Spring 2020 Release of the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) Professional is available, expanding the world’s largest collection of human inherited disease mutations to 282,895 entries–that’s 7,179 more than the previous release.
For over 30 years, HGMD Professional has been used worldwide by researchers, clinicians, diagnostic laboratories and genetic counselors as an essential tool for the annotation of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data in routine clinical and translational research. Founded and maintained by the Institute of Medical Genetics at Cardiff University, HGMD Professional provides users with a unique resource containing expert-curated mutations all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
Whether searching for an overview of known mutations associated with a particular disease, interpreting clinical test results, looking for the likely causal mutation in a list of variants, or seeking to integrate mutation content into your custom NGS pipeline or data repository—HGMD is the defacto-standard repository for heritable mutations that can be adapted to a broad range of applications.
detailed mutation reports
new mutation entries in 2019 alone
summary reports listing all known
inherited disease mutations
HGMD is powered by a team of expert curators at Cardiff University. Data are collected weekly by a combination of manual and computerized search procedures. In excess of 250 journals are scanned for articles describing germline mutations causing human genetic disease. The required data are extracted from the original articles and augmented with the necessary supporting data.
The number of disease-associated germline mutations published per year has more than doubled in the past decade (Figure 1). As rare and novel genetic mutations continue to be uncovered, having access to the latest scientific evidence is critical for timely interpretations of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data.
View the complete HGMD Professional statistics here.
Read more about the importance of having access to the most up-to-date and comprehensive database for human disease mutations in our white paper.
HGMD Professional helps clinical testing labs analyze and annotate next-generation sequencing (NGS) data with current and trusted information. Unlike other mutation databases, HGMD mutations are all backed by peer-reviewed publications where there is evidence of clinical impact.
To get the most out of your HGMD Professional subscription, visit our Resources webpage for case studies, technical notes, and video tutorials. Or hear from Peter Stenson, manager of HGMD, in an on-demand webinar on how HGMD has empowered a generation of geneticists for precision medicine here.
Or hear from Peter Stenson, manager of HGMD, in an on-demand webinar on how HGMD has empowered a generation of geneticists for precision medicine here.
An updated version of ANNOVAR is also available.
Learn more about how ANNOVAR can be used with HGMD for variant annotation. Watch a recorded webinar featuring ANNOVAR here.
The Genome Trax™ 2020.1 is now available. Updated tracks have been released with HGMD 2020.1 content for all HGMD-related tracks. Additional major updates include TRANSFAC® release 2020.1, and PROTEOME™ release 2020.1.
For labs looking to generate clinician-grade reports for germline or somatic NGS testing, QIAGEN Clinical Insight (QCI) Interpret reproducibly translates highly complex NGS data into standardized reports using current clinical evidence from the QIAGEN Knowledge Base, which consists of over 40 public and proprietary databases, including HGMD Professional.
Click here for a free demonstration of QCI Interpret.