Can anyone tell me anything about what this all means?!

makahfili

New member
Ok, so the Ambry test came back with:

125G>C (heterozygous), untranslated region. Benign classification.

2694T>T (homozygous), T854T, Benign classification.

Can anyone help me de-code this and give me some input?! SO concerned! Anything will help!! <img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
 

makahfili

New member
Ok, so the Ambry test came back with:

125G>C (heterozygous), untranslated region. Benign classification.

2694T>T (homozygous), T854T, Benign classification.

Can anyone help me de-code this and give me some input?! SO concerned! Anything will help!! <img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
 

makahfili

New member
Ok, so the Ambry test came back with:

125G>C (heterozygous), untranslated region. Benign classification.

2694T>T (homozygous), T854T, Benign classification.

Can anyone help me de-code this and give me some input?! SO concerned! Anything will help!! <img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
 

makahfili

New member
Ok, so the Ambry test came back with:

125G>C (heterozygous), untranslated region. Benign classification.

2694T>T (homozygous), T854T, Benign classification.

Can anyone help me de-code this and give me some input?! SO concerned! Anything will help!! <img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
 

makahfili

New member
Ok, so the Ambry test came back with:
<br />
<br />125G>C (heterozygous), untranslated region. Benign classification.
<br />
<br />2694T>T (homozygous), T854T, Benign classification.
<br />
<br />Can anyone help me de-code this and give me some input?! SO concerned! Anything will help!! <img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
 

kitomd21

New member
My thought is that these mutations aren't harmful or likely to cause CF symptoms...beyond that, I haven't a clue!
 

kitomd21

New member
My thought is that these mutations aren't harmful or likely to cause CF symptoms...beyond that, I haven't a clue!
 

kitomd21

New member
My thought is that these mutations aren't harmful or likely to cause CF symptoms...beyond that, I haven't a clue!
 

kitomd21

New member
My thought is that these mutations aren't harmful or likely to cause CF symptoms...beyond that, I haven't a clue!
 

kitomd21

New member
My thought is that these mutations aren't harmful or likely to cause CF symptoms...beyond that, I haven't a clue!
 

auntcob

New member
Hi--At 14, my son had the genetic testing and according to Genzyme, both of his mutations were benign and one of the them was the 2694>T. The CF doctor we saw said that there are no such things a s benign mutations. My understanding is that the genetic companies keep a database and these mutations have not been known to show symptoms. But, the one that my son has that you/your child has is a 5T variant--known to cause symptoms. Remember that CF is a clinical diagnosis; it requires more than genetic testing for a diagnosis. My son is diagnosed with variant CF. The first CF center we went to told us that as far as they were concerned, he did not have CF. They never saw him; just looked at genetic testing and borderline sweat test.
The second CF clinic we took him to did a full work-up including chest x-ray, blood work, PFT. The pulmonologist reviewed his medical history page-by-page with us. Each piece of evidence pointed to CF. His chest x-ray showed clearly mucous in his lower lobes; his PFT was indicative of CF lungs, not asthma lungs (previous diagnosis). He started taking pancreatic enzymes and has gone from 8-10 bouts of diarrhea a day to 2!

So--keep pushing if you/child are symptomatic. My son is doing well with little lung involvement at this time. It is a unique, individual condition!
 

auntcob

New member
Hi--At 14, my son had the genetic testing and according to Genzyme, both of his mutations were benign and one of the them was the 2694>T. The CF doctor we saw said that there are no such things a s benign mutations. My understanding is that the genetic companies keep a database and these mutations have not been known to show symptoms. But, the one that my son has that you/your child has is a 5T variant--known to cause symptoms. Remember that CF is a clinical diagnosis; it requires more than genetic testing for a diagnosis. My son is diagnosed with variant CF. The first CF center we went to told us that as far as they were concerned, he did not have CF. They never saw him; just looked at genetic testing and borderline sweat test.
The second CF clinic we took him to did a full work-up including chest x-ray, blood work, PFT. The pulmonologist reviewed his medical history page-by-page with us. Each piece of evidence pointed to CF. His chest x-ray showed clearly mucous in his lower lobes; his PFT was indicative of CF lungs, not asthma lungs (previous diagnosis). He started taking pancreatic enzymes and has gone from 8-10 bouts of diarrhea a day to 2!

So--keep pushing if you/child are symptomatic. My son is doing well with little lung involvement at this time. It is a unique, individual condition!
 

auntcob

New member
Hi--At 14, my son had the genetic testing and according to Genzyme, both of his mutations were benign and one of the them was the 2694>T. The CF doctor we saw said that there are no such things a s benign mutations. My understanding is that the genetic companies keep a database and these mutations have not been known to show symptoms. But, the one that my son has that you/your child has is a 5T variant--known to cause symptoms. Remember that CF is a clinical diagnosis; it requires more than genetic testing for a diagnosis. My son is diagnosed with variant CF. The first CF center we went to told us that as far as they were concerned, he did not have CF. They never saw him; just looked at genetic testing and borderline sweat test.
The second CF clinic we took him to did a full work-up including chest x-ray, blood work, PFT. The pulmonologist reviewed his medical history page-by-page with us. Each piece of evidence pointed to CF. His chest x-ray showed clearly mucous in his lower lobes; his PFT was indicative of CF lungs, not asthma lungs (previous diagnosis). He started taking pancreatic enzymes and has gone from 8-10 bouts of diarrhea a day to 2!

So--keep pushing if you/child are symptomatic. My son is doing well with little lung involvement at this time. It is a unique, individual condition!
 

auntcob

New member
Hi--At 14, my son had the genetic testing and according to Genzyme, both of his mutations were benign and one of the them was the 2694>T. The CF doctor we saw said that there are no such things a s benign mutations. My understanding is that the genetic companies keep a database and these mutations have not been known to show symptoms. But, the one that my son has that you/your child has is a 5T variant--known to cause symptoms. Remember that CF is a clinical diagnosis; it requires more than genetic testing for a diagnosis. My son is diagnosed with variant CF. The first CF center we went to told us that as far as they were concerned, he did not have CF. They never saw him; just looked at genetic testing and borderline sweat test.
The second CF clinic we took him to did a full work-up including chest x-ray, blood work, PFT. The pulmonologist reviewed his medical history page-by-page with us. Each piece of evidence pointed to CF. His chest x-ray showed clearly mucous in his lower lobes; his PFT was indicative of CF lungs, not asthma lungs (previous diagnosis). He started taking pancreatic enzymes and has gone from 8-10 bouts of diarrhea a day to 2!

So--keep pushing if you/child are symptomatic. My son is doing well with little lung involvement at this time. It is a unique, individual condition!
 

auntcob

New member
Hi--At 14, my son had the genetic testing and according to Genzyme, both of his mutations were benign and one of the them was the 2694>T. The CF doctor we saw said that there are no such things a s benign mutations. My understanding is that the genetic companies keep a database and these mutations have not been known to show symptoms. But, the one that my son has that you/your child has is a 5T variant--known to cause symptoms. Remember that CF is a clinical diagnosis; it requires more than genetic testing for a diagnosis. My son is diagnosed with variant CF. The first CF center we went to told us that as far as they were concerned, he did not have CF. They never saw him; just looked at genetic testing and borderline sweat test.
<br />The second CF clinic we took him to did a full work-up including chest x-ray, blood work, PFT. The pulmonologist reviewed his medical history page-by-page with us. Each piece of evidence pointed to CF. His chest x-ray showed clearly mucous in his lower lobes; his PFT was indicative of CF lungs, not asthma lungs (previous diagnosis). He started taking pancreatic enzymes and has gone from 8-10 bouts of diarrhea a day to 2!
<br />
<br />So--keep pushing if you/child are symptomatic. My son is doing well with little lung involvement at this time. It is a unique, individual condition!
 

makahfili

New member
Ok so my daughter is 8 and she has gotten a borderline sweat test, elevated Calprotectin levels as well as elevated fecal fat. Her and I both have classic pancreatic symptoms. She was diagnosed with colitis a month ago after her colonoscopy, as well as chronic pulmonary issues. I am not sure why they use the word 'benign' when speaking of a mutation, when the mutations are obviously causing symptoms!! What does 5-t variant mean?
 

makahfili

New member
Ok so my daughter is 8 and she has gotten a borderline sweat test, elevated Calprotectin levels as well as elevated fecal fat. Her and I both have classic pancreatic symptoms. She was diagnosed with colitis a month ago after her colonoscopy, as well as chronic pulmonary issues. I am not sure why they use the word 'benign' when speaking of a mutation, when the mutations are obviously causing symptoms!! What does 5-t variant mean?
 

makahfili

New member
Ok so my daughter is 8 and she has gotten a borderline sweat test, elevated Calprotectin levels as well as elevated fecal fat. Her and I both have classic pancreatic symptoms. She was diagnosed with colitis a month ago after her colonoscopy, as well as chronic pulmonary issues. I am not sure why they use the word 'benign' when speaking of a mutation, when the mutations are obviously causing symptoms!! What does 5-t variant mean?
 

makahfili

New member
Ok so my daughter is 8 and she has gotten a borderline sweat test, elevated Calprotectin levels as well as elevated fecal fat. Her and I both have classic pancreatic symptoms. She was diagnosed with colitis a month ago after her colonoscopy, as well as chronic pulmonary issues. I am not sure why they use the word 'benign' when speaking of a mutation, when the mutations are obviously causing symptoms!! What does 5-t variant mean?
 

makahfili

New member
Ok so my daughter is 8 and she has gotten a borderline sweat test, elevated Calprotectin levels as well as elevated fecal fat. Her and I both have classic pancreatic symptoms. She was diagnosed with colitis a month ago after her colonoscopy, as well as chronic pulmonary issues. I am not sure why they use the word 'benign' when speaking of a mutation, when the mutations are obviously causing symptoms!! What does 5-t variant mean?
 
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