Relative importance of genetic effects in rheumatoid arthritis: historical cohort study of Danish nationwide twin population
- PMID: 11823356
- PMCID: PMC65056
Relative importance of genetic effects in rheumatoid arthritis: historical cohort study of Danish nationwide twin population
Abstract
Objective: To determine the relative importance of environmental and genetic effects in the development of rheumatoid arthritis.
Design: Historical cohort study with record linkage between a twin registry and the Danish discharge registry as well as the Danish national registry of deaths used to estimate completeness.
Setting: Two population based nationwide twin birth cohorts.
Participants: 37 338 twins were sent a questionnaire about rheumatic diseases. Self reported rheumatoid arthritis was verified by clinical examination and from medical records.
Main outcome measures: The probandwise concordance rate of rheumatoid arthritis in monozygotic and dizygotic twins.
Results: The response rate was 84.7%. Rheumatoid arthritis was verified in 13 monozygotic and 36 dizygotic twins. There were no concordant monozygotic twin pairs and two concordant dizygotic twin pairs. Based on capture-recapture methods the probability of ascertainment was 78.3%. The probandwise concordance rate was 0 (95% confidence interval 0 to 24.7) in monozygotic twins and 8.8 (1.9 to 23.7) in dizygotic twins.
Conclusion: Genes are of minor importance in the development of rheumatoid arthritis.
Comment in
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Commentary: Do genes or environment influence development of rheumatoid arthritis?BMJ. 2002 Feb 2;324(7332):264. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 11936132 No abstract available.
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Using twin studies to label disease as genetic or environmental is inappropriate.BMJ. 2002 May 4;324(7345):1100-1. doi: 10.1136/bmj.324.7345.1100/b. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 11991930 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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- Lykken DT, Tellegen A, DeRubeis R. Volunteer bias in twin research: the rule of two-thirds. Soc Biol. 1978;25:1–9. - PubMed
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- Silman AJ, MacGregor AJ, Thomson W, Holligan S, Carthy D, Farhan A, et al. Twin concordance rates for rheumatoid arthritis: results from a nationwide study. Br J Rheumatol. 1993;32:903–907. - PubMed
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