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Differences in common genetic predisposition to ischemic stroke by age and sex

Version 2 2024-03-12, 13:54
Version 1 2023-10-18, 10:23
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 13:54 authored by Matthew Traylor, Loes C. A. Rutten-Jacobs, Martin Dichgans, Chris Levi, Cathryn M. Lewis, Hugh S. Markus, Elizabeth G. Holliday, Rainer Malik, Cathie Sudlow, Peter M. Rothwell, Jane M. Maguire, Simon A. Koblar, Stephen BevanStephen Bevan, Giorgio Boncoraglio

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEEvidence from epidemiological studies points to differences in factors predisposing to stroke by age and sex. Whether these arise because of different genetic influences remained untested. Here, we use data from 4 genome-wide association data sets to study the relationship between genetic influence on stroke with both age and sex.METHODSUsing genomic-relatedness-matrix restricted maximum likelihood methods, we performed 4 analyses: (1) we calculated the genetic correlation between groups divided by age and (2) by sex, (3) we calculated the heritability of age-at-stroke-onset, and (4) we evaluated the evidence that heritability of stroke is greater in women than in men.RESULTSWe found that genetic factors influence age at stroke onset (h(2) [SE]=18.0 [6.8]; P=0.0038), with a trend toward a stronger influence in women (women: h(2) [SE]=21.6 [3.5]; Men: h(2) [SE]=13.9 [2.8]). Although a moderate proportion of genetic factors was shared between sexes (rG [SE]=0.68 [0.16]) and between younger and older cases (rG [SE]=0.70 [0.17]), there was evidence to suggest that there are genetic susceptibility factors that are specific to sex (P=0.037) and to younger or older groups (P=0.056), particularly for women (P=0.0068). Finally, we found a trend toward higher heritability of stroke in women although this was not significantly greater than in men (P=0.084).CONCLUSIONSOur results indicate that there are genetic factors that are either unique to or have a different effect between younger and older age groups and between women and men. Performing large, well-powered genome-wide association study analyses in these groups is likely to uncover further associations.

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Stroke: a journal of cerebral circulation

Volume

46

Issue

11

Pages/Article Number

3042-7

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer for American Hgearrt Association

ISSN

0039-2499

eISSN

1524-4628

ISBN

0039-2499

Date Submitted

2015-11-04

Date Accepted

2015-10-06

Date of First Publication

2015-10-06

Date of Final Publication

2015-10-06

ePrints ID

19433

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