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Genetics of hand osteoarthritis.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2000; 8 Suppl A:S8-10.OC

Abstract

There is convincing epidemiological evidence for a strong hereditary component to hand osteoarthritis (OA). For example: (1) greater concordance for hand OA in monozygotic than in dizygotic twins, the estimated proportion of variance explained by genetic factors being as high as 0.59; and (2) a substantially increased risk of hand OA in first-degree relatives (siblings, parents, offspring) of subjects with hand OA. Such evidence clearly justifies a search for the genes involved. However, gene association studies in genetically complex polygenic conditions such as OA present many problems, including case definition, late age of phenotype expression and adjustment for other constitutional and environmental risk factors. Nevertheless, association studies of affected sibling pairs and nuclear families, using candidate gene and genome wide screening and transmission disequilibrium testing, suggest no association with candidates such as COL2A1 (responsible for some rare monogenic syndromes of premature generalized OA) but possible associations, currently not isolated, on chromosome 2q. Such ongoing work and subsequent gene-gene and gene-environment interaction studies are likely to give important, perhaps unexpected, insights into the pathogenesis of hand OA.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Academic Rheumatology, City Hospital, Nottingham, UK. michael.doherty@nottingham.ac.uk

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11156501

Citation

Doherty, M. "Genetics of Hand Osteoarthritis." Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, vol. 8 Suppl A, 2000, pp. S8-10.
Doherty M. Genetics of hand osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2000;8 Suppl A:S8-10.
Doherty, M. (2000). Genetics of hand osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, 8 Suppl A, S8-10.
Doherty M. Genetics of Hand Osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2000;8 Suppl A:S8-10. PubMed PMID: 11156501.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Genetics of hand osteoarthritis. A1 - Doherty,M, PY - 2001/1/13/pubmed PY - 2001/3/3/medline PY - 2001/1/13/entrez SP - S8 EP - 10 JF - Osteoarthritis and cartilage JO - Osteoarthritis Cartilage VL - 8 Suppl A N2 - There is convincing epidemiological evidence for a strong hereditary component to hand osteoarthritis (OA). For example: (1) greater concordance for hand OA in monozygotic than in dizygotic twins, the estimated proportion of variance explained by genetic factors being as high as 0.59; and (2) a substantially increased risk of hand OA in first-degree relatives (siblings, parents, offspring) of subjects with hand OA. Such evidence clearly justifies a search for the genes involved. However, gene association studies in genetically complex polygenic conditions such as OA present many problems, including case definition, late age of phenotype expression and adjustment for other constitutional and environmental risk factors. Nevertheless, association studies of affected sibling pairs and nuclear families, using candidate gene and genome wide screening and transmission disequilibrium testing, suggest no association with candidates such as COL2A1 (responsible for some rare monogenic syndromes of premature generalized OA) but possible associations, currently not isolated, on chromosome 2q. Such ongoing work and subsequent gene-gene and gene-environment interaction studies are likely to give important, perhaps unexpected, insights into the pathogenesis of hand OA. SN - 1063-4584 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11156501/Genetics_of_hand_osteoarthritis_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -