Article

A genome-wide association study of outcome from traumatic brain injury

Details

Citation

Kals M, Kunzmann K, Parodi L, Radmanesh F, Wilson L, Izzy S, Anderson CD, Puccio AM, Okonkwo DO, Temkin N, Steyerberg EW, Stein MB, Manley GT, Maas AIR & Richardson S (2022) A genome-wide association study of outcome from traumatic brain injury. EBioMedicine, 77, Art. No.: 103933. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.103933

Abstract
Background Factors such as age, pre-injury health, and injury severity, account for less than 35% of outcome variability in traumatic brain injury (TBI). While some residual outcome variability may be attributable to genetic factors, published candidate gene association studies have often been underpowered and subject to publication bias. Methods We performed the first genome- and transcriptome-wide association studies (GWAS, TWAS) of genetic effects on outcome in TBI. The study population consisted of 5268 patients from prospective European and US studies, who attended hospital within 24 h of TBI, and satisfied local protocols for computed tomography. Findings The estimated heritability of TBI outcome was 0·26. GWAS revealed no genetic variants with genome-wide significance (p < 5 × 10−8), but identified 83 variants in 13 independent loci which met a lower pre-specified sub-genomic statistical threshold (p < 10−5). Similarly, none of the genes tested in TWAS met tissue-wide significance. An exploratory analysis of 75 published candidate variants associated with 28 genes revealed one replicable variant (rs1800450 in the MBL2 gene) which retained significance after correction for multiple comparison (p = 5·24 × 10−4). Interpretation While multiple novel loci reached less stringent thresholds, none achieved genome-wide significance. The overall heritability estimate, however, is consistent with the hypothesis that common genetic variation substantially contributes to inter-individual variability in TBI outcome. The meta-analytic approach to the GWAS and the availability of summary data allows for a continuous extension with additional cohorts as data becomes available.

Keywords
Traumatic brain injury; Genome-Wide association study; Outcome; Recovery; Consortia

Notes
Additional co-authors: Ramon Diaz-Arrastia, Aarno Palotie, Samuli Ripatti, Jonathan Rosand, and David K. Menon on behalf of The Genetic Associations In Neurotrauma (GAIN) Consortium (with contribution from the CENTER-TBI, TRACK-TBI, CABI, MGB, and TBIcare studies)

Journal
EBioMedicine: Volume 77

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2022
Publication date online14/03/2022
Date accepted by journal25/02/2022
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34126
eISSN2352-3964

People (1)

People

Professor Lindsay Wilson

Professor Lindsay Wilson

Emeritus Professor, Psychology