Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Command Hospital (Southern Command), Pune, India.
Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Udhampur, India.
Eur J Med Res. 2024 Apr 12;29(1):232. doi: 10.1186/s40001-024-01786-8.
Varicose vein is a chronic condition that affects the lower extremities of the human body. Several factors have been implicated in the development of this disease, viz age, gender, weight, height and prolonged standing. Recently, genome-wide studies have identified genetic biomarkers that are associated with varicose veins in different ethnic groups. Such genetic studies are lacking in South Asians specifically in Indians where the prevalence of varicose veins is high, and it is important to replicate these variants in the stated population. The study aimed to replicate the association of genetic variants associated with varicose veins in this target population, which were found to be associated with the other ethnic groups.
The studied cohort is of the Indian population comprising unrelated 104 varicose veins cases and 448 non-varicose vein controls. The samples were genotyped using the Illumina Global Screening Array. Using the genomic data from UK BioBank and 23andMe studied cohorts; eight genetic variants were selected to replicate in our dataset. The allelic association was performed to identify the effective allele and risk was estimated using odds ratio and p-value as level of significance. Multifactor Dimensionality Reduction was used to estimate the cumulative effect of variants in Indians.
Variant rs3791679 of EFEMP1 was found to be associated with varicose veins in Indians. After observing the association of the EFEMP1 with varicose veins, we further ensued to identify all genetic variants within EFEMP1 to uncover the additional variants associated with this trait. Interestingly, we identified six new variants of EFEMP1 gene that have shown association. Moreover, the cumulative effect of all associated variations was estimated and the risk was 2.7 times higher in cases than controls whereas independently their effect ranges from 0.37-1.58.
This study identifies EFEMP1 as a potential gene related to the risk of varicose veins in Indians. It also highlights that evaluating the maximum number of variants of a gene rather than focusing solely on replicating single variations offers a more comprehensive and nuanced understanding of the genetic factors contributing to a complex trait like varicose veins.
静脉曲张是一种影响人体下肢的慢性疾病。多种因素与这种疾病的发展有关,例如年龄、性别、体重、身高和长时间站立。最近,全基因组研究已经确定了与不同种族静脉曲张相关的遗传生物标志物。在南亚人群中,特别是在静脉曲张高发的印度人群中,这种遗传研究还很缺乏,因此在该人群中复制这些变体非常重要。本研究旨在复制与其他种族相关的与静脉曲张相关的遗传变异在这一目标人群中的关联。
研究队列为印度人群,包括 104 例静脉曲张病例和 448 例非静脉曲张对照。使用 Illumina Global Screening Array 对样本进行基因分型。利用 UK BioBank 和 23andMe 研究队列的基因组数据,选择了 8 个遗传变异来在我们的数据集进行复制。通过等位基因关联来确定有效等位基因,并使用比值比和 p 值作为显著性水平来估计风险。使用多因子降维来估计印度人群中变异的累积效应。
EFEMP1 中的 rs3791679 变异与印度人的静脉曲张有关。观察到 EFEMP1 与静脉曲张的关联后,我们进一步确定 EFEMP1 中的所有遗传变异,以揭示与该特征相关的其他变异。有趣的是,我们鉴定出 EFEMP1 基因的六个新变异与该特征有关。此外,还估计了所有相关变异的累积效应,病例组的风险比对照组高 2.7 倍,而单独分析时,其效应范围为 0.37-1.58。
本研究确定 EFEMP1 为印度人静脉曲张风险相关的潜在基因。它还强调,评估一个基因的最大数量的变异,而不是仅仅关注单个变异的复制,可以更全面和细致地了解导致静脉曲张等复杂特征的遗传因素。