Koenen Karestan C, De Vivo Immaculata, Rich-Edwards Janet, Smoller Jordan W, Wright Rosalind J, Purcell Shaun M
Department of Society, Human Development and Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2009 May 29;9:29. doi: 10.1186/1471-244X-9-29.
One in nine American women will meet criteria for the diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in their lifetime. Although twin studies suggest genetic influences account for substantial variance in PTSD risk, little progress has been made in identifying variants in specific genes that influence liability to this common, debilitating disorder.
We are using the unique resource of the Nurses Health Study II, a prospective epidemiologic cohort of 68,518 women, to conduct what promises to be the largest candidate gene association study of PTSD to date. The entire cohort will be screened for trauma exposure and PTSD; 3,000 women will be selected for PTSD diagnostic interviews based on the screening data. Our nested case-control study will genotype 1000 women who developed PTSD following a history of trauma exposure; 1000 controls will be selected from women who experienced similar traumas but did not develop PTSD.The primary aim of this study is to detect genetic variants that predict the development of PTSD following trauma. We posit inherited vulnerability to PTSD is mediated by genetic variation in three specific neurobiological systems whose alterations are implicated in PTSD etiology: the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the locus coeruleus/noradrenergic system, and the limbic-frontal neuro-circuitry of fear. The secondary, exploratory aim of this study is to dissect genetic influences on PTSD in the broader genetic and environmental context for the candidate genes that show significant association with PTSD in detection analyses. This will involve: conducting conditional tests to identify the causal genetic variant among multiple correlated signals; testing whether the effect of PTSD genetic risk variants is moderated by age of first trauma, trauma type, and trauma severity; and exploring gene-gene interactions using a novel gene-based statistical approach.
Identification of liability genes for PTSD would represent a major advance in understanding the pathophysiology of the disorder. Such understanding could advance the development of new pharmacological agents for PTSD treatment and prevention. Moreover, the addition of PTSD assessment data will make the NHSII cohort an unparalleled resource for future genetic studies of PTSD as well as provide the unique opportunity for the prospective examination of PTSD-disease associations.
九分之一的美国女性在其一生中会符合创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的诊断标准。尽管双胞胎研究表明遗传因素在PTSD风险的显著差异中起作用,但在确定影响这种常见且使人衰弱的疾病易感性的特定基因变异方面进展甚微。
我们正在利用护士健康研究II这一独特资源,它是一个有68518名女性的前瞻性流行病学队列,开展一项有望成为迄今为止最大规模的PTSD候选基因关联研究。将对整个队列进行创伤暴露和PTSD筛查;根据筛查数据,将挑选3000名女性进行PTSD诊断访谈。我们的巢式病例对照研究将对1000名有创伤暴露史后患上PTSD的女性进行基因分型;1000名对照将从经历过类似创伤但未患上PTSD的女性中选取。本研究的主要目的是检测预测创伤后PTSD发生的基因变异。我们假定对PTSD的遗传易感性是由三个特定神经生物学系统的基因变异介导的,这些系统的改变与PTSD病因有关:下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴、蓝斑/去甲肾上腺素能系统以及恐惧的边缘 - 额叶神经回路。本研究的次要探索性目的是在更广泛的遗传和环境背景下剖析候选基因对PTSD的遗传影响,这些候选基因在检测分析中与PTSD有显著关联。这将包括:进行条件检验以在多个相关信号中识别因果基因变异;测试PTSD遗传风险变异的效应是否受首次创伤年龄、创伤类型和创伤严重程度的影响;以及使用一种新的基于基因的统计方法探索基因 - 基因相互作用。
确定PTSD的易感性基因将是在理解该疾病病理生理学方面的一项重大进展。这样的理解可以推动开发用于PTSD治疗和预防的新药。此外,增加PTSD评估数据将使护士健康研究II队列成为未来PTSD基因研究的无与伦比的资源,同时也为前瞻性研究PTSD与疾病的关联提供独特机会。