rs1014137 - ITPRID1

Magnitude 2.2 · 1 study on file

Reported associations

  • Genome-wide genotyping demonstrates a polygenic risk score associated with white matter hyperintensity volume in CADASIL. - Stroke (2014) · Opherk C, Gonik M, Duering M, Malik R, Jouvent E, Hervé D, Adib-Samii P, Bevan S, Pianese L, Silvestri S, Dotti MT, De Stefano N, Liem M, Boon EM, Pescini F, Pachai C, Bracoud L, Müller-Myhsok B, Meitinger T, Rost N, Pantoni L, Lesnik Oberstein S, Federico A, Ragno M, Markus HS, Tournier-Lasserve E, Rosand J, Chabriat H, Dichgans M · PubMed 24578207

    White matter hyperintensities (WMH) on MRI are a quantitative marker for sporadic cerebral small vessel disease and are highly heritable. To date, large-scale genetic studies have identified only a single locus influencing WMH burden. This might in part relate to biological heterogeneity of sporadic WMH. The current study searched for genetic modifiers of WMH volume in cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), a monogenic small vessel disease. We performed a genome-wide association study to identify quantitative trait loci for WMH volume by combining data from 517 CADASIL patients collected through 7 centers across Europe. WMH volumes were centrally analyzed and quantified on fluid attenuated inversion recovery images. Genotyping


Auto-generated from study metadata. AI-synthesised commentary is added when this entry is regenerated through content-service's LLM mode.