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A genome-wide association study of chronic spontaneous urticaria risk and heterogeneity - 04/05/23

Doi : 10.1016/j.jaci.2022.10.019 
Diana Chang, PhD a, , Christian Hammer, PhD a, b, Cecile T.J. Holweg, PhD c, Suresh Selvaraj, PhD d, Nisha Rathore, PhD e, Mark I. McCarthy, MD a, Brian L. Yaspan, PhD a, David F. Choy, BS e
a Department of Human Genetics, Genentech Inc, South San Francisco, Calif 
b Department of Cancer Immunology, Genentech Inc, South San Francisco, Calif 
c OMNI US Medical Affairs, Genentech Inc, South San Francisco, Calif 
d Department of Biosample and Repository Management, Genentech Inc, South San Francisco, Calif 
e Biomarker Discovery OMNI, Genentech Inc, South San Francisco, Calif 

Corresponding author: Diana Chang, PhD, Genentech, 1 DNA Way, South San Francisco, CA 94080.Genentech1 DNA WaySouth San FranciscoCA94080

Abstract

Background

Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is a dermatologic condition characterized by spontaneous, pruritic hives and/or angioedema that persists for 6 weeks or longer with no identifiable trigger. Antihistamines and second-line therapies such as omalizumab are effective for some CSU patients, but others remain symptomatic, with significant impact on quality of life. This variable response to treatment and autoantibody levels across patients highlight clinically heterogeneous subgroups.

Objective

We aimed to highlight pathways involved in CSU by investigating the genetics of CSU risk and subgroups.

Methods

We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 679 CSU patients and 4446 controls and a GWAS of chronic urticaria (CU)-index, which measures IgG autoantibodies levels, by comparing 447 CU index–low to 183 CU index–high patients. We also tested whether polygenic scores for autoimmune-related disorders were associated with CSU risk and CU index.

Results

We identified 2 loci significantly associated with disease risk. The strongest association mapped to position 56 of HLA-DQA1 (P = 1.69 × 10−9), where the arginine residue was associated with increased risk (odds ratio = 1.64). The second association signal colocalized with expression-quantitative trait loci for ITPKB in whole blood (Pcolocalization = .997). The arginine residue at position 56 of HLA-DQA1 was also associated with increased risk of CU index–high (P = 6.15 × 10−5, odds ratio = 1.86), while the ITKPB association was not (P = .64). Polygenic scores for 3 autoimmune-related disorders (hypothyroidism, type 1 diabetes, and vitiligo) were associated with CSU risk and CU index (P < 2.34 × 10−3, odds ratio > 1.72).

Conclusion

A GWAS of CSU identified 2 genome-wide significant loci, highlighting the shared genetics between CU index and autoimmune disorders.

Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.

Key words : Genome-wide association studies, chronic spontaneous urticaria

Abbreviations used : CSU, CU, eQTL, GWAS, LD, MAF, MHC, PRS, SNP


Mappa


 The last 2 authors contributed equally to this article, and both should be considered senior author.
 Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: All authors were employees of Genentech at the time this study was conducted.


© 2022  The Authors. Pubblicato da Elsevier Masson SAS. Tutti i diritti riservati.
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Vol 151 - N° 5

P. 1351-1356 - Maggio 2023 Ritorno al numero
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