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GWAS Study

Sex- and age-specific genetic analysis of chronic back pain.

Freidin MB, Tsepilov YA, Stanaway IB et al.

33021770 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
245817 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

FM
Freidin MB
TY
Tsepilov YA
SI
Stanaway IB
MW
Meng W
HC
Hayward C
SB
Smith BH
KS
Khoury S
PM
Parisien M
BA
Bortsov A
DL
Diatchenko L
BS
Børte S
WB
Winsvold BS
BB
Brumpton BM
ZJ
Zwart JA
AY
Aulchenko YS
SP
Suri P
WF
Williams FMK
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Sex differences for chronic back pain (cBP) have been reported, with females usually exhibiting greater morbidity, severity, and poorer response to treatment. Genetic factors acting in an age-specific manner have been implicated but never comprehensively explored. We performed sex- and age-stratified genome-wide association study and single nucleotide polymorphism-by-sex interaction analysis for cBP defined as "Back pain for 3+ months" in 202,077 males and 237,754 females of European ancestry from UK Biobank. Two and 7 nonoverlapping genome-wide significant loci were identified for males and females, respectively. A male-specific locus on chromosome 10 near SPOCK2 gene was replicated in 4 independent cohorts. Four loci demonstrated single nucleotide polymorphism-by-sex interaction, although none of them were formally replicated. Single nucleotide polymorphism-explained heritability was higher in females (0.079 vs 0.067, P = 0.006). There was a high, although not complete, genetic correlation between the sexes (r = 0.838 ± 0.041, different from 1 with P = 7.8E-05). Genetic correlation between the sexes for cBP decreased with age (0.858 ± 0.049 in younger people vs 0.544 ± 0.157 in older people; P = 4.3E-05). There was a stronger genetic correlation of cBP with self-reported diagnosis of intervertebral disk degeneration in males than in females (0.889 vs 0.638; P = 3.7E-06). Thus, the genetic component of cBP in the UK Biobank exhibits a mild sex- and age-dependency. This provides an insight into the possible causes of sex- and age-specificity in epidemiology and pathophysiology of cBP and chronic pain at other anatomical sites.

35,705 European ancestry male cases, 166,372 European ancestry male controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

245817
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
10,723 European ancestry male cases, 33,017 European ancestry male controls
Replication Participants
European
Ancestry
U.K., Norway, U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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