Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
EBioMedicine. 2023 Apr;90:104536. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104536. Epub 2023 Mar 28.
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) are limited due to the underdiagnosis of OSA, leading to misclassification of OSA, which consequently reduces statistical power. We performed a GWAS of OSA in the Million Veteran Program (MVP) of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare system, where OSA prevalence is close to its true population prevalence.
We performed GWAS of 568,576 MVP participants, stratified by biological sex and by harmonized race/ethnicity and genetic ancestry (HARE) groups of White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian individuals. We considered both BMI adjusted (BMI-adj) and unadjusted (BMI-unadj) models. We replicated associations in independent datasets, and analysed the heterogeneity of OSA genetic associations across HARE and sex groups. We finally performed a larger meta-analysis GWAS of MVP, FinnGen, and the MGB Biobank, totalling 916,696 individuals.
MVP participants are 91% male. OSA prevalence is 21%. In MVP there were 18 and 6 genome-wide significant loci in BMI-unadj and BMI-adj analyses, respectively, corresponding to 21 association regions. Of these, 17 were not previously reported in association with OSA, and 13 replicated in FinnGen (False Discovery Rate p-value < 0.05). There were widespread significant differences in genetic effects between men and women, but less so across HARE groups. Meta-analysis of MVP, FinnGen, and MGB biobank revealed 17 additional, previously unreported, genome-wide significant regions.
Sex differences in genetic associations with OSA are widespread, likely associated with multiple OSA risk factors. OSA shares genetic underpinnings with several sleep phenotypes, suggesting shared aetiology and causal pathways.
Described in acknowledgements.
由于阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的诊断不足,导致 OSA 分类错误,从而降低了统计效力,因此全基因组关联研究(GWAS)受到限制。我们在美国退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗保健系统的百万退伍军人计划(MVP)中进行了 OSA 的 GWAS,其中 OSA 的患病率接近其真实人群的患病率。
我们对 568576 名 MVP 参与者进行了 GWAS,按生物性别和按白种人、黑种人、西班牙裔和亚洲人种族/民族(HARE)组进行分层。我们考虑了 BMI 调整(BMI-adj)和未调整(BMI-unadj)模型。我们在独立数据集上复制了关联,并分析了 HARE 和性别组之间 OSA 遗传关联的异质性。最后,我们对 MVP、FinnGen 和 MGB 生物银行进行了更大规模的荟萃分析 GWAS,共涉及 916696 人。
MVP 参与者中 91%为男性,OSA 的患病率为 21%。在 MVP 中,BMI-unadj 和 BMI-adj 分析分别有 18 个和 6 个全基因组显著位点,对应 21 个关联区域。其中,17 个先前未与 OSA 相关联,13 个在 FinnGen 中复制(错误发现率 p 值<0.05)。男性和女性之间的遗传效应存在广泛的显著差异,但 HARE 组之间的差异较小。对 MVP、FinnGen 和 MGB 生物银行的荟萃分析揭示了 17 个以前未报告的、全基因组显著的新区域。
OSA 与遗传关联的性别差异广泛存在,可能与多种 OSA 危险因素有关。OSA 与多个睡眠表型具有遗传基础,表明存在共同的发病机制和因果途径。
在致谢中描述。