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GWAS Study

A multivariate genome-wide association study of psycho-cardiometabolic multimorbidity.

Baltramonaityte V, Pingault JB, Cecil CAM et al.

37390107 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
562507 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

BV
Baltramonaityte V
PJ
Pingault JB
CC
Cecil CAM
CP
Choudhary P
JM
Järvelin MR
PB
Penninx BWJH
FJ
Felix J
SS
Sebert S
MY
Milaneschi Y
WE
Walton E
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Coronary artery disease (CAD), type 2 diabetes (T2D) and depression are among the leading causes of chronic morbidity and mortality worldwide. Epidemiological studies indicate a substantial degree of multimorbidity, which may be explained by shared genetic influences. However, research exploring the presence of pleiotropic variants and genes common to CAD, T2D and depression is lacking. The present study aimed to identify genetic variants with effects on cross-trait liability to psycho-cardiometabolic diseases. We used genomic structural equation modelling to perform a multivariate genome-wide association study of multimorbidity (Neffective = 562,507), using summary statistics from univariate genome-wide association studies for CAD, T2D and major depression. CAD was moderately genetically correlated with T2D (rg = 0.39, P = 2e-34) and weakly correlated with depression (rg = 0.13, P = 3e-6). Depression was weakly correlated with T2D (rg = 0.15, P = 4e-15). The latent multimorbidity factor explained the largest proportion of variance in T2D (45%), followed by CAD (35%) and depression (5%). We identified 11 independent SNPs associated with multimorbidity and 18 putative multimorbidity-associated genes. We observed enrichment in immune and inflammatory pathways. A greater polygenic risk score for multimorbidity in the UK Biobank (N = 306,734) was associated with the co-occurrence of CAD, T2D and depression (OR per standard deviation = 1.91, 95% CI = 1.74-2.10, relative to the healthy group), validating this latent multimorbidity factor. Mendelian randomization analyses suggested potentially causal effects of BMI, body fat percentage, LDL cholesterol, total cholesterol, fasting insulin, income, insomnia, and childhood maltreatment. These findings advance our understanding of multimorbidity suggesting common genetic pathways.

562,507 European, South Asian, East Asian, Hispanic or African American individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

562507
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, South Asian, East Asian, Hispanic or Latin American, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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