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Meta-Analysis
. 2012 Aug;61(8):2187-94.
doi: 10.2337/db11-0751. Epub 2012 Jun 20.

Association testing of previously reported variants in a large case-control meta-analysis of diabetic nephropathy

Affiliations
Meta-Analysis

Association testing of previously reported variants in a large case-control meta-analysis of diabetic nephropathy

Winfred W Williams et al. Diabetes. 2012 Aug.

Abstract

We formed the GEnetics of Nephropathy-an International Effort (GENIE) consortium to examine previously reported genetic associations with diabetic nephropathy (DN) in type 1 diabetes. GENIE consists of 6,366 similarly ascertained participants of European ancestry with type 1 diabetes, with and without DN, from the All Ireland-Warren 3-Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes U.K. and Republic of Ireland (U.K.-R.O.I.) collection and the Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy Study (FinnDiane), combined with reanalyzed data from the Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes U.S. Study (U.S. GoKinD). We found little evidence for the association of the EPO promoter polymorphism, rs161740, with the combined phenotype of proliferative retinopathy and end-stage renal disease in U.K.-R.O.I. (odds ratio [OR] 1.14, P = 0.19) or FinnDiane (OR 1.06, P = 0.60). However, a fixed-effects meta-analysis that included the previously reported cohorts retained a genome-wide significant association with that phenotype (OR 1.31, P = 2 × 10(-9)). An expanded investigation of the ELMO1 locus and genetic regions reported to be associated with DN in the U.S. GoKinD yielded only nominal statistical significance for these loci. Finally, top candidates identified in a recent meta-analysis failed to reach genome-wide significance. In conclusion, we were unable to replicate most of the previously reported genetic associations for DN, and significance for the EPO promoter association was attenuated.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Previously published and new results from this study provide an estimate of the effect of the EPO promoter SNP (rs1617640) on the risk of the combined phenotype of PDR and ESRD in type 1 diabetes in five cohorts (3,162 case subjects and 3,845 control subjects) in a fixed-effects meta-analysis.

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