多基因评分对帕金森病合并症的影响

IF 4.5 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Brain communications Pub Date : 2025-08-29 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcaf325
Carlos F Hernández, Camilo Villaman, Cristian Tejos, Gabriela M Repetto, Costin Leu, Dennis Lal, Ignacio F Mata, Andrés D Klein, Eduardo Pérez-Palma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

合并症在帕金森病中很常见,并显著影响疾病的进展和治疗。虽然多基因评分已被广泛用于评估复杂疾病的遗传风险,但它们在帕金森病共病表现中的作用尚不清楚。本研究调查了通过多基因评分测量的帕金森病患者和一般人群的共病遗传易感性是否存在差异,并探讨了遗传风险如何影响疾病的发病和性别相关差异。我们分析了来自英国生物银行的4144名帕金森病患者和370480名普通人群的数据,重点研究了四种共病和高质量的全基因组关联研究数据:2型糖尿病、重度抑郁症、偏头痛和癫痫。我们首先比较了帕金森病患者和一般人群之间的多基因评分分布。虽然我们的研究结果表明,帕金森病患者和一般人群之间的合并症和多基因风险评分没有显著差异,但我们显示了与疾病发病和性别特异性差异的关联。发病较早的个体(50-70岁)患重度抑郁症(优势比:2.19,p值:1.27 × 10⁻¹)和癫痫(优势比:1.58,p值:0.00845)的遗传风险较高。此外,患有帕金森病的女性参与者在重度抑郁症(优势比:1.5,p值:0.0119)和偏头痛(优势比:2.1,p值:0.0155)方面表现出更高的遗传风险评分,而男性参与者在2型糖尿病方面表现出更高的遗传风险评分(优势比:2.7,p值:2.11 × 10⁻¹⁷)。共病-多基因评分在帕金森病患者和非帕金森病患者之间没有差异,但在帕金森病患者中,特定共病的较高遗传负担与早期发病和性别特异性表现有关,这意味着常见变异是临床异质性的修饰因子,而不是原发性疾病风险。这些结果增强了我们对遗传影响形成帕金森病更广泛临床表现的理解,并强调需要进一步研究遗传风险因素、合并症和疾病异质性之间的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Polygenic scores contribution to Parkinson's disease comorbidities.

Polygenic scores contribution to Parkinson's disease comorbidities.

Polygenic scores contribution to Parkinson's disease comorbidities.

Polygenic scores contribution to Parkinson's disease comorbidities.

Comorbidities are common in Parkinson's disease and significantly impact the disease progression and management. While polygenic scores have been widely used to assess genetic risk for complex diseases, their role in comorbidity presentation in Parkinson's disease remains unclear. This study investigates whether genetic predisposition to comorbidities, as measured by polygenic scores, differs between individuals with Parkinson's disease and the general population and explores how genetic risk influences disease onset and sex-related differences. We analysed data from 4144 individuals with Parkinson's disease and 370 480 individuals from the general population in the UK Biobank, focusing on four comorbidities with high-quality genome-wide association study data: Type 2 diabetes, major depressive disorder, migraine headaches and epilepsy. We first compared polygenic score distributions between individuals with Parkinson's disease and the general population. While our findings indicate that comorbidities and polygenic risk scores do not significantly differ between individuals with Parkinson's disease and the general population, we show an association with disease onset and sex-specific differences. Individuals with earlier disease onset (50-70 years old) had higher genetic risk for major depressive disorder (odds ratio: 2.19, P-value: 1.27 × 10⁻¹⁵) and epilepsy (odds ratio: 1.58, P-value: 0.00845). Additionally, a female participant with Parkinson's disease exhibited higher genetic risk scores for major depressive disorder (odds ratio: 1.5, P-value: 0.0119) and migraine headaches (odds ratio: 2.1, P-value: 0.0155), while a male participant displayed higher genetic risk scores for Type 2 diabetes (odds ratio: 2.7, P-value: 2.11 × 10⁻¹⁷). Comorbidity-polygenic score did not differ between people with versus without Parkinson's disease, yet within Parkinson's disease, a higher genetic burden for specific comorbidities was linked to earlier onset and sex-specific presentation, implicating common variants as modifiers of clinical heterogeneity rather than the primary disease risk. These results enhance our understanding of the genetic influences shaping the broader clinical presentation of Parkinson's disease and highlight the need for further research into the interplay between genetic risk factors, comorbidities and disease heterogeneity.

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