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GWAS Study

An atlas of genetic determinants of forearm fracture.

Nethander M, Movérare-Skrtic S, Kämpe A et al.

37919453 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1690009 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NM
Nethander M
MS
Movérare-Skrtic S
KA
Kämpe A
CE
Coward E
RE
Reimann E
GL
Grahnemo L
Borbély É
HZ
Helyes Z
FT
Funck-Brentano T
CM
Cohen-Solal M
TJ
Tuukkanen J
KA
Koskela A
WJ
Wu J
LL
Li L
LT
Lu T
GM
Gabrielsen ME
MR
Mägi R
HM
Hoff M
LU
Lerner UH
HP
Henning P
UH
Ullum H
EC
Erikstrup C
BS
Brunak S
LA
Langhammer A
TT
Tuomi T
OA
Oddsson A
SK
Stefansson K
PU
Pettersson-Kymmer U
OS
Ostrowski SR
PO
Pedersen OBV
SU
Styrkarsdottir U
MO
Mäkitie O
HK
Hveem K
RJ
Richards JB
OC
Ohlsson C
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Osteoporotic fracture is among the most common and costly of diseases. While reasonably heritable, its genetic determinants have remained elusive. Forearm fractures are the most common clinically recognized osteoporotic fractures with a relatively high heritability. To establish an atlas of the genetic determinants of forearm fractures, we performed genome-wide association analyses including 100,026 forearm fracture cases. We identified 43 loci, including 26 new fracture loci. Although most fracture loci associated with bone mineral density, we also identified loci that primarily regulate bone quality parameters. Functional studies of one such locus, at TAC4, revealed that Tac4-/- mice have reduced mechanical bone strength. The strongest forearm fracture signal, at WNT16, displayed remarkable bone-site-specificity with no association with hip fractures. Tall stature and low body mass index were identified as new causal risk factors for fractures. The insights from this atlas may improve fracture prediction and enable therapeutic development to prevent fractures.

50,471 European ancestry cases, 969,623 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1690009
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
49,555 cases, 620,360 controls
Replication Participants
European
Ancestry
Sweden, Norway, Finland, U.K., Estonia, Denmark, Iceland
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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