Hi all.. Anyone can help explaining the difference between MAF (mutant allele) and VAF (variant allele) frequency? Thanks
Hi all.. Anyone can help explaining the difference between MAF (mutant allele) and VAF (variant allele) frequency? Thanks
I know this post is really old, but I was wondering the same thing, and this recent paper gave a great explaination.
... in the literature, VAF is often substituted by mutant allele frequency (MAF), which carries the same meaning. However, the term MAF may also be used as minor allele frequency and refers to the frequency of germline alleles in large cohorts analyzed by genome-wide association studies (GWASs) [52]. For this reason, a good practice is to use VAF as a metric of cancerous variants.
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Could be Multiple Ambiguous Formats ...
As far as I know the 'M' in MAF means
minor
and notmutant
. I think VAF and MAF are the same.Note that even "minor allele frequency" is overloaded here. In a traditional sense, minor allele frequency refers to the frequency of an allele in a population of patients from a germline sampling. The variant allele frequency is typically used in a cancer setting to describe the proportion of reads with the variant allele within a single patient. The best option is to define what you mean very specifically; use in the literature is not a good guide, as is evidenced by the comments here.
Yes, and I would favour the term Variant Allele Fraction (or Variant Allelic Fraction) rather than Variant Allele Frequency for this reason too!
Looks like the MAF acronym is being repeatedly hijacked!
There is:
Edit: As per Wouter's ultimate conclusion, you can consider mutant allele fraction and VAF as the same. Minor allele frequency is more used in GWAS studies.
Don't forget the Multiple Alignment Format.
Yet there is a gene called MAF