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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study of problematic opioid prescription use in 132,113 23andMe research participants of European ancestry.

Sanchez-Roige S, Fontanillas P, Jennings MV et al.

34728798 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
132113 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SS
Sanchez-Roige S
FP
Fontanillas P
JM
Jennings MV
BS
Bianchi SB
HY
Huang Y
HA
Hatoum AS
SJ
Sealock J
DL
Davis LK
ES
Elson SL
PA
Palmer AA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The growing prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) constitutes an urgent health crisis. Ample evidence indicates that risk for OUD is heritable. As a surrogate (or proxy) for OUD, we explored the genetic basis of using prescription opioids 'not as prescribed'. We hypothesized that misuse of opiates might be a heritable risk factor for OUD. To test this hypothesis, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of problematic opioid use (POU) in 23andMe research participants of European ancestry (N = 132,113; 21% cases). We identified two genome-wide significant loci (rs3791033, an intronic variant of KDM4A; rs640561, an intergenic variant near LRRIQ3). POU showed positive genetic correlations with the two largest available GWAS of OUD and opioid dependence (rg = 0.64, 0.80, respectively). We also identified numerous additional genetic correlations with POU, including alcohol dependence (rg = 0.74), smoking initiation (rg = 0.63), pain relief medication intake (rg = 0.49), major depressive disorder (rg = 0.44), chronic pain (rg = 0.42), insomnia (rg = 0.39), and loneliness (rg = 0.28). Although POU was positively genetically correlated with risk-taking (rg = 0.38), conditioning POU on risk-taking did not substantially alter the magnitude or direction of these genetic correlations, suggesting that POU does not simply reflect a genetic tendency towards risky behavior. Lastly, we performed phenome- and lab-wide association analyses, which uncovered additional phenotypes that were associated with POU, including respiratory failure, insomnia, ischemic heart disease, and metabolic and blood-related biomarkers. We conclude that opioid misuse can be measured in population-based cohorts and provides a cost-effective complementary strategy for understanding the genetic basis of OUD.

27,805 European ancestry cases, 104,308 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

132113
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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