학술논문

A genome-wide association study of outcome from traumatic brain injury
Document Type
article
Author
Kals, MartKunzmann, KevinParodi, LiviaRadmanesh, FaridWilson, LindsayIzzy, SaefAnderson, Christopher DPuccio, Ava MOkonkwo, David OTemkin, NancySteyerberg, Ewout WStein, Murray BManley, Geoff TMaas, Andrew IRRichardson, SylviaDiaz-Arrastia, RamonPalotie, AarnoRipatti, SamuliRosand, JonathanMenon, David KÅkerlund, CeciliaAmrein, KrisztinaAndelic, NadaAndreassen, LasseAnke, AudnyAntoni, AnnaAudibert, GérardAzouvi, PhilippeAzzolini, Maria LuisaBartels, RonaldBarzó, PálBeauvais, RomualdBeer, RonnyBellander, Bo-MichaelBelli, AntonioBenali, HabibBerardino, MaurizioBeretta, LuigiBlaabjerg, MortenBragge, PeterBrazinova, AlexandraBrinck, VibekeBrooker, JoanneBrorsson, CamillaBuki, AndrasBullinger, MonikaCabeleira, ManuelCaccioppola, AlessioCalappi, EmilianaCalvi, Maria RosaCameron, PeterLozano, Guillermo CarbayoCarbonara, MarcoCavallo, SimonaChevallard, GiorgioChieregato, ArturoCiterio, GiuseppeClusmann, HansCoburn, MarkColes, Jonathan PCooper, Jamie DCorreia, MartaČović, AmraCurry, NicolaCzeiter, EndreCzosnyka, MarekDahyotFizelier, ClaireDark, PaulDawes, HelenDe Keyser, VéroniqueDegos, VincentCorte, Francesco DellaBoogert, Hugo denDepreitere, BartĐilvesi, ĐulaDixit, AbhishekDonoghue, EmmaDreier, JensDulière, GuyLoupErcole, AriEsser, PatrickEzer, ErzsébetFabricius, MartinFeigin, Valery LFoks, KellyFrisvold, ShirinFurmanov, AlexGagliardo, PabloGalanaud, DamienGantner, DashiellGao, GuoyiGeorge, PradeepGhuysen, AlexandreGiga, LeldeGlocker, BenGolubovic, JagošGomez, Pedro AGratz, JohannesGravesteijn, BenjaminGrossi, Francesca
Source
Subject
Epidemiology
Health Sciences
Traumatic Head and Spine Injury
Genetics
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Neurosciences
Brain Disorders
Human Genome
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Good Health and Well Being
Brain Injuries
Traumatic
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Mannose-Binding Lectin
Prospective Studies
Transcriptome
Traumatic brain injury
Genome-Wide association study
Outcome
Recovery
Consortia
Genetic Associations In Neurotrauma (GAIN) Consortium
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundFactors such as age, pre-injury health, and injury severity, account for less than 35% of outcome variability in traumatic brain injury (TBI). While some residual outcome variability may be attributable to genetic factors, published candidate gene association studies have often been underpowered and subject to publication bias.MethodsWe performed the first genome- and transcriptome-wide association studies (GWAS, TWAS) of genetic effects on outcome in TBI. The study population consisted of 5268 patients from prospective European and US studies, who attended hospital within 24 h of TBI, and satisfied local protocols for computed tomography.FindingsThe estimated heritability of TBI outcome was 0·26. GWAS revealed no genetic variants with genome-wide significance (p < 5 × 10-8), but identified 83 variants in 13 independent loci which met a lower pre-specified sub-genomic statistical threshold (p < 10-5). Similarly, none of the genes tested in TWAS met tissue-wide significance. An exploratory analysis of 75 published candidate variants associated with 28 genes revealed one replicable variant (rs1800450 in the MBL2 gene) which retained significance after correction for multiple comparison (p = 5·24 × 10-4).InterpretationWhile multiple novel loci reached less stringent thresholds, none achieved genome-wide significance. The overall heritability estimate, however, is consistent with the hypothesis that common genetic variation substantially contributes to inter-individual variability in TBI outcome. The meta-analytic approach to the GWAS and the availability of summary data allows for a continuous extension with additional cohorts as data becomes available.FundingA full list of funding bodies that contributed to this study can be found in the Acknowledgements section.