AI Article Synopsis

  • Osteoarthritis is a common disease influenced by genetics, but its impact on disease progression and the need for joint replacement is not well understood.
  • * This study analyzed over 700,000 individuals, comparing genetic variants in patients with and without joint replacements for knee and hip osteoarthritis.
  • * Findings revealed 52 genetic variants linked to osteoarthritis, with variations in associations based on whether patients had surgery, suggesting distinct genetic influences on disease outcomes.*

Article Abstract

Objectives: Osteoarthritis is a common and severe, multifactorial disease with a well-established genetic component. However, little is known about how genetics affect disease progression, and thereby the need for joint placement. Therefore, we aimed to investigate whether the genetic associations of knee and hip osteoarthritis differ between patients treated with joint replacement and patients without joint replacement.

Methods: We included knee and hip osteoarthritis cases along with healthy controls, altogether counting >700 000 individuals. The cases were divided into two groups based on joint replacement status (surgical vs non-surgical) and included in four genome-wide association meta-analyses: surgical knee osteoarthritis (N = 22 525), non-surgical knee osteoarthritis (N = 38 626), surgical hip osteoarthritis (N = 20 221) and non-surgical hip osteoarthritis (N = 17 847). In addition, we tested for genetic correlation between the osteoarthritis groups and the pain phenotypes intervertebral disc disorder, dorsalgia, fibromyalgia, migraine and joint pain.

Results: We identified 52 sequence variants associated with knee osteoarthritis (surgical: 17, non-surgical: 3) or hip osteoarthritis (surgical: 34, non-surgical: 1). For the surgical phenotypes, we identified 10 novel variants, including genes involved in autophagy (rs2447606 in ) and mechanotransduction (rs202127176 in ). One variant, rs13107325 in , associated more strongly with non-surgical knee osteoarthritis than surgical knee osteoarthritis. For all other variants, significance and effect sizes were higher for the surgical phenotypes. In contrast, genetic correlations with pain phenotypes tended to be stronger in the non-surgical groups.

Conclusions: Our results indicate differences in genetic associations between knee and hip osteoarthritis depending on joint replacement status.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ard-2022-223199DOI Listing

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