J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2010 Sep;49(9):884-897. Epub 2010 Aug 1.
Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder.
Neale BM, Medland SE, Ripke S, Asherson P, Franke B, Lesch KP, Faraone SV, Nguyen TT, Schäfer H, Holmans P, Daly M, Steinhausen HC, Freitag C, Reif A, Renner TJ, Romanos M, Romanos J, Walitza S, Warnke A, Meyer J, Palmason H, Buitelaar J, Vasquez AA, Lambregts-Rommelse N, Gill M, Anney RJ, Langely K, O'Donovan M, Williams N, Owen M, Thapar A, Kent L, Sergeant J, Roeyers H, Mick E, Biederman J, Doyle A, Smalley S, Loo S, Hakonarson H, Elia J, Todorov A, Miranda A, Mulas F, Ebstein RP, Rothenberger A, Banaschewski T, Oades RD, Sonuga-Barke E, McGough J, Nisenbaum L, Middleton F, Hu X, Nelson S; Psychiatric GWAS Consortium: ADHD Subgroup.
Center for Human Genetic Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, Cambridge, MA.Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although twin and family studies have shown attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to be highly heritable, genetic variants influencing the trait at a genome-wide significant level have yet to be identified. As prior genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have not yielded significant results, we conducted a meta-analysis of existing studies to boost statistical power.
METHOD: We used data from four projects: a) the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP); b) phase I of the International Multicenter ADHD Genetics project (IMAGE); c) phase II of IMAGE (IMAGE II); and d) the Pfizer-funded study from the University of California, Los Angeles, Washington University, and Massachusetts General Hospital (PUWMa). The final sample size consisted of 2,064 trios, 896 cases, and 2,455 controls. For each study, we imputed HapMap single nucleotide polymorphisms, computed association test statistics and transformed them to z-scores, and then combined weighted z-scores in a meta-analysis.
RESULTS: No genome-wide significant associations were found, although an analysis of candidate genes suggests that they may be involved in the disorder.
CONCLUSIONS: Given that ADHD is a highly heritable disorder, our negative results suggest that the effects of common ADHD risk variants must, individually, be very small or that other types of variants, e.g., rare ones, account for much of the disorder's heritability.
PMID: 20732625 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]PMCID: PMC2928252 [Available on 2011/9/1]
Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies o... [J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2010] - PubMed result
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