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GWAS Study

Multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of cannabis use disorder yields insight into disease biology and public health implications.

Levey DF, Galimberti M, Deak JD et al.

37985822 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
38289 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LD
Levey DF
GM
Galimberti M
DJ
Deak JD
WF
Wendt FR
BA
Bhattacharya A
KD
Koller D
HK
Harrington KM
QR
Quaden R
JE
Johnson EC
GP
Gupta P
BM
Biradar M
LM
Lam M
CM
Cooke M
RV
Rajagopal VM
ES
Empke SLL
ZH
Zhou H
NY
Nunez YZ
KH
Kranzler HR
EH
Edenberg HJ
AA
Agrawal A
SJ
Smoller JW
LT
Lencz T
HD
Hougaard DM
BA
Børglum AD
DD
Demontis D
GJ
Gaziano JM
GM
Gandal MJ
PR
Polimanti R
SM
Stein MB
GJ
Gelernter J
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

As recreational use of cannabis is being decriminalized in many places and medical use widely sanctioned, there are growing concerns about increases in cannabis use disorder (CanUD), which is associated with numerous medical comorbidities. Here we performed a genome-wide association study of CanUD in the Million Veteran Program (MVP), followed by meta-analysis in 1,054,365 individuals (ncases = 64,314) from four broad ancestries designated by the reference panel used for assignment (European n = 886,025, African n = 123,208, admixed American n = 38,289 and East Asian n = 6,843). Population-specific methods were applied to calculate single nucleotide polymorphism-based heritability within each ancestry. Statistically significant single nucleotide polymorphism-based heritability for CanUD was observed in all but the smallest population (East Asian). We discovered genome-wide significant loci unique to each ancestry: 22 in European, 2 each in African and East Asian, and 1 in admixed American ancestries. A genetically informed causal relationship analysis indicated a possible effect of genetic liability for CanUD on lung cancer risk, suggesting potential unanticipated future medical and psychiatric public health consequences that require further study to disentangle from other known risk factors such as cigarette smoking.

2,774 Admixed American cases, 35,515 Admixed American controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

38289
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Hispanic or Latin American, East Asian, European, African unspecified
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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