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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study in individuals of European and African ancestry and multi-trait analysis of opioid use disorder identifies 19 independent genome-wide significant risk loci.

Deak JD, Zhou H, Galimberti M et al.

35879402 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
554186 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

DJ
Deak JD
ZH
Zhou H
GM
Galimberti M
LD
Levey DF
WF
Wendt FR
SS
Sanchez-Roige S
HA
Hatoum AS
JE
Johnson EC
NY
Nunez YZ
DD
Demontis D
BA
Børglum AD
RV
Rajagopal VM
JM
Jennings MV
KR
Kember RL
JA
Justice AC
EH
Edenberg HJ
AA
Agrawal A
PR
Polimanti R
KH
Kranzler HR
GJ
Gelernter J
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Despite the large toll of opioid use disorder (OUD), genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of OUD to date have yielded few susceptibility loci. We performed a large-scale GWAS of OUD in individuals of European (EUR) and African (AFR) ancestry, optimizing genetic informativeness by performing MTAG (Multi-trait analysis of GWAS) with genetically correlated substance use disorders (SUDs). Meta-analysis included seven cohorts: the Million Veteran Program, Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, iPSYCH, FinnGen, Partners Biobank, BioVU, and Yale-Penn 3, resulting in a total N = 639,063 (Ncases = 20,686;Neffective = 77,026) across ancestries. OUD cases were defined as having a lifetime OUD diagnosis, and controls as anyone not known to meet OUD criteria. We estimated SNP-heritability (h2SNP) and genetic correlations (rg). Based on genetic correlation, we performed MTAG on OUD, alcohol use disorder (AUD), and cannabis use disorder (CanUD). A leave-one-out polygenic risk score (PRS) analysis was performed to compare OUD and OUD-MTAG PRS as predictors of OUD case status in Yale-Penn 3. The EUR meta-analysis identified three genome-wide significant (GWS; p ≤ 5 × 10-8) lead SNPs-one at FURIN (rs11372849; p = 9.54 × 10-10) and two OPRM1 variants (rs1799971, p = 4.92 × 10-09; rs79704991, p = 1.11 × 10-08; r2 = 0.02). Rs1799971 (p = 4.91 × 10-08) and another OPRM1 variant (rs9478500; p = 1.95 × 10-08; r2 = 0.03) were identified in the cross-ancestry meta-analysis. Estimated h2SNP was 12.75%, with strong rg with CanUD (rg = 0.82; p = 1.14 × 10-47) and AUD (rg = 0.77; p = 6.36 × 10-78). The OUD-MTAG resulted in a GWAS Nequivalent = 128,748 and 18 independent GWS loci, some mapping to genes or gene regions that have previously been associated with psychiatric or addiction phenotypes. The OUD-MTAG PRS accounted for 3.81% of OUD variance (beta = 0.61;s.e. = 0.066; p = 2.00 × 10-16) compared to 2.41% (beta = 0.45; s.e. = 0.058; p = 2.90 × 10-13) explained by the OUD PRS. The current study identified OUD variant associations at OPRM1, single variant associations with FURIN, and 18 GWS associations in the OUD-MTAG. The genetic architecture of OUD is likely influenced by both OUD-specific loci and loci shared across SUDs.

15,251 European ancestry cases, 538,935 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

554186
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, African unspecified
Ancestry
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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