PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Genetic associations with radiological damage in rheumatoid arthritis: Meta-analysis of seven genome-wide association studies of 2,775 cases.

  • Matthew Traylor,
  • Rachel Knevel,
  • Jing Cui,
  • John Taylor,
  • Westra Harm-Jan,
  • Philip G Conaghan,
  • Andrew P Cope,
  • Charles Curtis,
  • Paul Emery,
  • Stephen Newhouse,
  • Hamel Patel,
  • Sophia Steer,
  • Peter Gregersen,
  • Nancy A Shadick,
  • Michael E Weinblatt,
  • Annette Van Der Helm-van Mil,
  • Jennifer H Barrett,
  • Ann W Morgan,
  • Cathryn M Lewis,
  • Ian C Scott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223246
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. e0223246

Abstract

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BackgroundPrevious studies of radiological damage in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have used candidate-gene approaches, or evaluated single genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We undertook the first meta-analysis of GWAS of RA radiological damage to: (1) identify novel genetic loci for this trait; and (2) test previously validated variants.MethodsSeven GWAS (2,775 RA cases, of a range of ancestries) were combined in a meta-analysis. Radiological damage was assessed using modified Larsen scores, Sharp van Der Heijde scores, and erosive status. Single nucleotide polymophsim (SNP) associations with radiological damage were tested at a single time-point using regression models. Primary analyses included age and disease duration as covariates. Secondary analyses also included rheumatoid factor (RF). Meta-analyses were undertaken in trans-ethnic and European-only cases.ResultsIn the trans-ethnic primary meta-analysis, one SNP (rs112112734) in close proximity to HLA-DRB1, and strong linkage disequilibrium with the shared-epitope, attained genome-wide significance (P = 4.2x10-8). In the secondary analysis (adjusting for RF) the association was less significant (P = 1.7x10-6). In both trans-ethnic primary and secondary meta-analyses 14 regions contained SNPs with associations reaching PConclusionsOur meta-analysis confirms the known association between the HLA-DRB1 shared epitope and RA radiological damage. The lack of replication of previously validated non-HLA markers highlights a requirement for further research to deliver clinically-useful prognostic genetic markers.