rs10900220 - MARCHF8
Magnitude 2.2 · 1 study on file
Reported associations
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A cross-disorder study to identify causal relationships, shared genetic variants, and genes across 21 digestive disorders - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 37965154
ABSTRACT: Summary Digestive disorders are a significant contributor to the global burden of disease and seriously affect human quality of life. Research has already confirmed the presence of pleiotropic genetic loci among digestive disorders, and studies have explored shared genetic factors among pan-cancers, including various malignant digestive disorders. However, most cross-phenotype studies within the digestive tract system have been limited to a few traits, with no systematic coverage of common benign and malignant digestive disorders. Here, we analyzed data from the UK Biobank to investigate 21 digestive disorders, exploring the genetic correlations and causal relationships between diseases, as well as the common genetic factors and potential biological pathways driving these relatio
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Lifestyle context
Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.
Discuss with your doctor
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genetic risk for cholecystitis with provider Moderate
GWAS in 329,707 subjects shows rs10900220 associated with 1.09-fold increased cholecystitis risk; awareness enables informed clinical screening decisions
inform healthcare provider of this genetic association
Screening
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cholecystitis symptoms Moderate
GWAS identifies 1.09-fold increased genetic risk for cholecystitis; variant carriers should maintain heightened awareness of symptoms
seek medical evaluation if experiencing acute abdominal pain, fever, or post-prandial nausea