Preview of redesigned dynamic filters with AND/OR Logic
VarSome Clinical introduces a preview of our redesigned filtering experience, featuring intuitive AND/OR logic for more flexible, precise filtering of clinically relevant variants.
The new filter builder gives you full control over how filters relate to one another. Previously, all filters were joined by AND logic only, now each filter is independent, and you can define AND/OR relationships between individual filters and groups of filters.
Please note that while these preview filters cannot be saved for future use yet, they will remain active across sessions on the analysis page where they were created. However, they are stored in your browser's local storage and will persist until you clear your browser data, use a private/incognito window, or switch to a different browser. Moreover, previously saved filter sets remain fully available and work exactly as before.
In an upcoming release, all existing filter sets will be automatically converted to the new AND/OR format to allow for easy editing with the new AND/OR logic.
Our new filtering system can be tested by enabling the “New filters” from the analysis page. The new re-designed filter configuration can be opened by clicking on the Filters button.



Key capabilities include:
- Flexible relationships: set AND/OR logic between any filters or filter groups
- Drag-and-drop configuration: reorder and organize filters easily
- Sub-groups: nest filters into groups for more complex logic
- Exclude mode: exclude variants matching specific criteria by enabling the Exclude toggle on any filter
Users can always check the applied filters from the collapsed side-bar and edit the filters by clicking on the edit button.
Users in this phase can edit the filters by clicking on Edit filters directly from the Applied Filters side-bar.
Users can switch back to the classic filters at any time by disabling the new filters to keep using their saved filter sets.

An example can be found in the document How can I filter my results by Frequency or Pathogenicity ?.



