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Meta-analysis of Icelandic and UK data sets identifies missense variants in SMO, IL11, COL11A1 and 13 more new loci associated with osteoarthritis.

Styrkarsdottir U, Lund SH, Thorleifsson G et al.

30374069 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
586030 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SU
Styrkarsdottir U
LS
Lund SH
TG
Thorleifsson G
ZF
Zink F
SO
Stefansson OA
SJ
Sigurdsson JK
JK
Juliusson K
BK
Bjarnadottir K
SS
Sigurbjornsdottir S
JS
Jonsson S
NK
Norland K
SL
Stefansdottir L
SA
Sigurdsson A
SG
Sveinbjornsson G
OA
Oddsson A
BG
Bjornsdottir G
GR
Gudmundsson RL
HG
Halldorsson GH
RT
Rafnar T
JI
Jonsdottir I
SE
Steingrimsson E
NG
Norddahl GL
MG
Masson G
SP
Sulem P
JH
Jonsson H
IT
Ingvarsson T
GD
Gudbjartsson DF
TU
Thorsteinsdottir U
SK
Stefansson K
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Osteoarthritis has a highly negative impact on quality of life because of the associated pain and loss of joint function. Here we describe the largest meta-analysis so far of osteoarthritis of the hip and the knee in samples from Iceland and the UK Biobank (including 17,151 hip osteoarthritis patients, 23,877 knee osteoarthritis patients, and more than 562,000 controls). We found 23 independent associations at 22 loci in the additive meta-analyses, of which 16 of the loci were novel: 12 for hip and 4 for knee osteoarthritis. Two associations are between rare or low-frequency missense variants and hip osteoarthritis, affecting the genes SMO (rs143083812, frequency 0.11%, odds ratio (OR) = 2.8, P = 7.9 × 10-12, p.Arg173Cys) and IL11 (rs4252548, frequency 2.08%, OR = 1.30, P = 2.1 × 10-11, p.Arg112His). A common missense variant in the COL11A1 gene also associates with hip osteoarthritis (rs3753841, frequency 61%, P = 5.2 × 10-10, OR = 1.08, p.Pro1284Leu). In addition, using a recessive model, we confirm an association between hip osteoarthritis and a variant of CHADL1 (rs117018441, P = 1.8 × 10-25, OR = 5.9). Furthermore, we observe a complex relationship between height and risk of osteoarthritis.

23,877 European ancestry cases, 562,153 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

586030
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Iceland, U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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