4.5 Article

Genome-wide association and admixture analysis of glaucoma in the Women's Health Initiative

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 23, Issue 24, Pages 6634-6643

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu364

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R25 CA112355]
  2. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health
  3. United States Department of Health and Human Services [HHSN268201100046C, HHSN2682011 000 01C, HHSN268201100002C, HHSN268201100003C, HHS N2 68201100004C, HHSN271201100004C]

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We report a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and admixture analysis of glaucoma in 12 008 African-American and Hispanic women (age 50-79 years) from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI). Although GWAS of glaucoma have been conducted on several populations, this is the first to look at glaucoma in individuals of African-American and Hispanic race/ethnicity. Prevalent and incident glaucoma was determined by self-report from study questionnaires administered at baseline (1993-1998) and annually through 2005. For African Americans, there was a total of 658 prevalent cases, 1062 incident cases and 6067 individuals who never progressed to glaucoma. For our replication cohort, we used the WHI Hispanics, including 153 prevalent cases, 336 incident cases and 2685 non-cases. We found an association of African ancestry with glaucoma incidence in African Americans (hazards ratio 1.62, 95% CI 1.023-2.56, P = 0.038) and in Hispanics (hazards ratio 3.21, 95% CI 1.32-7.80, P = 0.011). Although we found that no previously identified glaucoma SNPs replicated in either the WHI African Americans or Hispanics, a risk score combining all previously reported hits was significant in African-American prevalent cases (P = 0.0046), and was in the expected direction in the incident cases, as well as in the Hispanic incident cases. Additionally, after imputing to 1000 Genomes, two less common independent SNPs were suggestive in African Americans, but had too low of an allele frequency in Hispanics to test for replication. These results suggest the possibility of a distinct genetic architecture underlying glaucoma in individuals of African ancestry.

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