Recently Chu et al. conducted a genome-wide association study in a Chinese Han population and identified two novel Graves' disease (GD) susceptibility loci within 4p14 (rs6832151) and 6q27 (rs9355610). Our purpose was to replicate these associations in a Polish Caucasian population. We analyzed rs6832151 and rs9355610 genotypes in a case-control study based on 560 GD patients and 1475 unrelated controls using TaqMan assays. Our study had the power of 0.8 and 0.6 to detect the effects originally reported for rs6832151 and rs9355610, respectively. We found an association between GD and the rs6832151 G allele (odds ratio OR = 1.27, P = 0.002). Analysis of model of inheritance suggested that the dominant model should be preferred (P(fit) = 0.938, OR = 1.39, P = 0.001). For rs9355610 a formally significant effect was observed assuming a recessive model (OR = 1.24, P = 0.028), whereas analysis of allele distribution showed a trend for association (OR = 1.14,95%, P = 0.082). Our findings are the first to show that rs6832151 and possibly rs9355610 contribute to GD pathogenesis also in Caucasians.

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