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Resource NamingSystem/FHIR Server from package hl7.terminology#current (32 ms)

Package hl7.terminology
Type NamingSystem
Id Id
FHIR Version R5
Source http://terminology.hl7.org/https://build.fhir.org/ig/HL7/UTG/NamingSystem-v3-hgnc.html
Url http://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/v3-hgnc
Version 3.1.0
Status active
Date 2024-08-22T00:00:00-00:00
Name HGNCGenes
Title HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee Genes
Experimental False
Realm uv
Authority hl7
Description "The HGNC is responsible for approving unique symbols and names for human loci, including protein coding genes, ncRNA genes and pseudogenes, to allow unambiguous scientific communication." The HGNC gene table carries gene IDs, gene symbols and full gene names. Guidance from HGNC confirms that gene symbols are not unique across species and have been known to change in some instances. Thus the commonly used gene symbols should be encoded in FHIR as "displays" with the corresponding IDs (beginning with "HGNC:") as the "codes". "For each known human gene we approve a gene name and symbol (short-form abbreviation). All approved symbols are stored in the HGNC database,[www.genenames.org](https://www.genenames.org/tools/search), a curated online repository of HGNC-approved gene nomenclature, gene groups and associated resources including links to genomic, proteomic and phenotypic information. Each symbol is unique and we ensure that each gene is only given one approved gene symbol. It is necessary to provide a unique symbol for each gene so that we and others can talk about them, and this also facilitates electronic data retrieval from publications and databases." HGNC also provides an index on gene families/groups. GeneGroup IDs do not begin with "HGNC:", so care must be made to ensure alignment of concepts when viewing an HGNC ID from an older system that may be referring to the GeneID and not a gene group. For example, 588 refers to the HLA gene family, but HGNC:588 identifies the ATG12 gene. To provide clarity for systems that do not distinguish codes from genes and gene families, use "http://www.genenames.org" for genes and "http://www.genenames.org/genegroup" for gene families as code system URIs. For more information on HGNC Gene Groups, see [https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html](https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html). Historically, HGNC gene symbols were used with the HL7 coded data type. For example, in the HL7 messages specified according to the HL7 V2 Clinical Genomics Fully LOINC-Qualified Genetic Variation Model Implementation Guide, HGNC gene symbols were used as the observation values for gene identifiers. For example, OBX 1 CWE 48018-6^Gene identifier^ BRCA1^HGNC. Please note that gene symbols may be present in legacy systems, but GeneID should be used to exchange HGNC gene information in current implementations. HGNC is a free database for the public. Versioning Information: The version of the HGNC database is reported using the last updated date. The last updated date is posted on the main HGNC Search screen in the format like "2024-07-25". Current, monthly and quarterly HGNC dataset files are published. Please see https://www.genenames.org/ for more info.
Kind codesystem

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Narrative

Note: links and images are rebased to the (stated) source

Generated Narrative: NamingSystem v3-hgnc

Summary

Defining URLhttp://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/v3-hgnc
Version3.1.0
NameHGNCGenes
TitleHUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee Genes
Statusactive
Definition

"The HGNC is responsible for approving unique symbols and names for human loci, including protein coding genes, ncRNA genes and pseudogenes, to allow unambiguous scientific communication."

The HGNC gene table carries gene IDs, gene symbols and full gene names. Guidance from HGNC confirms that gene symbols are not unique across species and have been known to change in some instances. Thus the commonly used gene symbols should be encoded in FHIR as "displays" with the corresponding IDs (beginning with "HGNC:") as the "codes".

"For each known human gene we approve a gene name and symbol (short-form abbreviation). All approved symbols are stored in the HGNC database,www.genenames.org, a curated online repository of HGNC-approved gene nomenclature, gene groups and associated resources including links to genomic, proteomic and phenotypic information. Each symbol is unique and we ensure that each gene is only given one approved gene symbol. It is necessary to provide a unique symbol for each gene so that we and others can talk about them, and this also facilitates electronic data retrieval from publications and databases."

HGNC also provides an index on gene families/groups. GeneGroup IDs do not begin with "HGNC:", so care must be made to ensure alignment of concepts when viewing an HGNC ID from an older system that may be referring to the GeneID and not a gene group. For example, 588 refers to the HLA gene family, but HGNC:588 identifies the ATG12 gene. To provide clarity for systems that do not distinguish codes from genes and gene families, use "http://www.genenames.org" for genes and "http://www.genenames.org/genegroup" for gene families as code system URIs.

For more information on HGNC Gene Groups, see https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html.

Historically, HGNC gene symbols were used with the HL7 coded data type. For example, in the HL7 messages specified according to the HL7 V2 Clinical Genomics Fully LOINC-Qualified Genetic Variation Model Implementation Guide, HGNC gene symbols were used as the observation values for gene identifiers. For example, OBX 1 CWE 48018-6^Gene identifier^ BRCA1^HGNC. Please note that gene symbols may be present in legacy systems, but GeneID should be used to exchange HGNC gene information in current implementations.

HGNC is a free database for the public.

Versioning Information: The version of the HGNC database is reported using the last updated date. The last updated date is posted on the main HGNC Search screen in the format like "2024-07-25".

Current, monthly and quarterly HGNC dataset files are published.

Please see https://www.genenames.org/ for more info.

PublisherHUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee

Identifiers

TypeValuePreferredPeriodComment
URIhttp://www.genenames.orgtrue2022-08-25 --> (ongoing)This is the URL as specified by the terminology owner, and is considered authoritative.
URIhttp://www.genenames.org/geneIdfalse
OID2.16.840.1.113883.6.281true

Source

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  "id" : "v3-hgnc",
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    "status" : "generated",
    "div" : "<div xmlns=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml\"><p class=\"res-header-id\"><b>Generated Narrative: NamingSystem v3-hgnc</b></p><a name=\"v3-hgnc\"> </a><a name=\"hcv3-hgnc\"> </a><a name=\"v3-hgnc-en-US\"> </a><h3>Summary</h3><table class=\"grid\"><tr><td>Defining URL</td><td>http://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/v3-hgnc</td></tr><tr><td>Version</td><td>3.1.0</td></tr><tr><td>Name</td><td>HGNCGenes</td></tr><tr><td>Title</td><td>HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee Genes</td></tr><tr><td>Status</td><td>active</td></tr><tr><td>Definition</td><td><div><p>&quot;The HGNC is responsible for approving unique symbols and names for human loci, including protein coding genes, ncRNA genes and pseudogenes, to allow unambiguous scientific communication.&quot;</p>\n<p>The HGNC gene table carries gene IDs, gene symbols and full gene names. Guidance from HGNC confirms that gene symbols are not unique across species and have been known to change in some instances. Thus the commonly used gene symbols should be encoded in FHIR as &quot;displays&quot; with the corresponding IDs (beginning with &quot;HGNC:&quot;) as the &quot;codes&quot;.</p>\n<p>&quot;For each known human gene we approve a gene name and symbol (short-form abbreviation). All approved symbols are stored in the HGNC database,<a href=\"https://www.genenames.org/tools/search\">www.genenames.org</a>, a curated online repository of HGNC-approved gene nomenclature, gene groups and associated resources including links to genomic, proteomic and phenotypic information. Each symbol is unique and we ensure that each gene is only given one approved gene symbol. It is necessary to provide a unique symbol for each gene so that we and others can talk about them, and this also facilitates electronic data retrieval from publications and databases.&quot;</p>\n<p>HGNC also provides an index on gene families/groups. GeneGroup IDs do not begin with &quot;HGNC:&quot;, so care must be made to ensure alignment of concepts when viewing an HGNC ID from an older system that may be referring to the GeneID and not a gene group. For example, 588 refers to the HLA gene family, but HGNC:588 identifies the ATG12 gene. To provide clarity for systems that do not distinguish codes from genes and gene families, use &quot;http://www.genenames.org&quot; for genes and &quot;http://www.genenames.org/genegroup&quot; for gene families as code system URIs.</p>\n<p>For more information on HGNC Gene Groups, see <a href=\"https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html\">https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html</a>.</p>\n<p>Historically, HGNC gene symbols were used with the HL7 coded data type. For example, in the HL7 messages specified according to the HL7 V2 Clinical Genomics Fully LOINC-Qualified Genetic Variation Model Implementation Guide, HGNC gene symbols were used as the observation values for gene identifiers. For example, OBX 1 CWE 48018-6^Gene identifier^ BRCA1^HGNC. Please note that gene symbols may be present in legacy systems, but GeneID should be used to exchange HGNC gene information in current implementations.</p>\n<p>HGNC is a free database for the public.</p>\n<p>Versioning Information: The version of the HGNC database is reported using the last updated date. The last updated date is posted on the main HGNC Search screen in the format like &quot;2024-07-25&quot;.</p>\n<p>Current, monthly and quarterly HGNC dataset files are published.</p>\n<p>Please see https://www.genenames.org/ for more info.</p>\n</div></td></tr><tr><td>Publisher</td><td>HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee</td></tr></table><h3>Identifiers</h3><table class=\"grid\"><tr><td><b>Type</b></td><td><b>Value</b></td><td><b>Preferred</b></td><td><b>Period</b></td><td><b>Comment</b></td></tr><tr><td>URI</td><td>http://www.genenames.org</td><td>true</td><td>2022-08-25 --&gt; (ongoing)</td><td>This is the URL as specified by the terminology owner, and is considered authoritative.</td></tr><tr><td>URI</td><td>http://www.genenames.org/geneId</td><td>false</td><td></td><td/></tr><tr><td>OID</td><td>2.16.840.1.113883.6.281</td><td>true</td><td></td><td/></tr></table></div>"
  },
  "url" : "http://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/v3-hgnc",
  "version" : "3.1.0",
  "name" : "HGNCGenes",
  "title" : "HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee Genes",
  "status" : "active",
  "kind" : "codesystem",
  "date" : "2024-08-22T00:00:00-00:00",
  "publisher" : "HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee",
  "contact" : [
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      "name" : "HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee",
      "telecom" : [
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          "value" : "https://www.genenames.org/"
        },
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  "responsible" : "HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee",
  "description" : "\"The HGNC is responsible for approving unique symbols and names for human loci, including protein coding genes, ncRNA genes and pseudogenes, to allow unambiguous scientific communication.\"\r\n\r\nThe HGNC gene table carries gene IDs, gene symbols and full gene names. Guidance from HGNC confirms that gene symbols are not unique across species and have been known to change in some instances. Thus the commonly used gene symbols should be encoded in FHIR as \"displays\" with the corresponding IDs (beginning with \"HGNC:\") as the \"codes\".\r\n\r\n\"For each known human gene we approve a gene name and symbol (short-form abbreviation). All approved symbols are stored in the HGNC database,[www.genenames.org](https://www.genenames.org/tools/search), a curated online repository of HGNC-approved gene nomenclature, gene groups and associated resources including links to genomic, proteomic and phenotypic information. Each symbol is unique and we ensure that each gene is only given one approved gene symbol. It is necessary to provide a unique symbol for each gene so that we and others can talk about them, and this also facilitates electronic data retrieval from publications and databases.\"\r\n\r\nHGNC also provides an index on gene families/groups. GeneGroup IDs do not begin with \"HGNC:\", so care must be made to ensure alignment of concepts when viewing an HGNC ID from an older system that may be referring to the GeneID and not a gene group. For example, 588 refers to the HLA gene family, but HGNC:588 identifies the ATG12 gene. To provide clarity for systems that do not distinguish codes from genes and gene families, use \"http://www.genenames.org\" for genes and \"http://www.genenames.org/genegroup\" for gene families as code system URIs.\r\n\r\nFor more information on HGNC Gene Groups, see [https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html](https://terminology.hl7.org/CodeSystem-HGNCGeneGroup.html).\r\n\r\nHistorically, HGNC gene symbols were used with the HL7 coded data type. For example, in the HL7 messages specified according to the HL7 V2 Clinical Genomics Fully LOINC-Qualified Genetic Variation Model Implementation Guide, HGNC gene symbols were used as the observation values for gene identifiers. For example, OBX 1 CWE 48018-6^Gene identifier^ BRCA1^HGNC. Please note that gene symbols may be present in legacy systems, but GeneID should be used to exchange HGNC gene information in current implementations.\r\n\r\nHGNC is a free database for the public.\r\n\r\nVersioning Information: The version of the HGNC database is reported using the last updated date. The last updated date is posted on the main HGNC Search screen in the format like \"2024-07-25\".\r\n\r\nCurrent, monthly and quarterly HGNC dataset files are published.\r\n\r\nPlease see https://www.genenames.org/ for more info.",
  "uniqueId" : [
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      "type" : "uri",
      "value" : "http://www.genenames.org",
      "preferred" : true,
      "comment" : "This is the URL as specified by the terminology owner, and is considered authoritative.",
      "period" : {
        "start" : "2022-08-25"
      }
    },
    {
      "type" : "uri",
      "value" : "http://www.genenames.org/geneId",
      "preferred" : false
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      "type" : "oid",
      "value" : "2.16.840.1.113883.6.281",
      "preferred" : true
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}

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