Investigation of clinical characteristics and genome associations in the ‘UK Lipoedema’ cohort

Author:

Grigoriadis Dionysios,Sackey Ege,Riches Katie,van Zanten Malou,Brice Glen,England Ruth,Mills MikeORCID,Dobbins Sara E.ORCID,Lee Li Ling,Jeffery Steve,Dong Liang,Savage David B.,Mortimer Peter S.,Keeley Vaughan,Pittman Alan,Gordon Kristiana,Ostergaard PiaORCID, ,

Abstract

Lipoedema is a chronic adipose tissue disorder mainly affecting women, causing excess subcutaneous fat deposition on the lower limbs with pain and tenderness. There is often a family history of lipoedema, suggesting a genetic origin, but the contribution of genetics is currently unclear. A tightly phenotyped cohort of 200 lipoedema patients was recruited from two UK specialist clinics. Objective clinical characteristics and measures of quality of life data were obtained. In an attempt to understand the genetic architecture of the disease better, genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotype data were obtained, and a genome wide association study (GWAS) was performed on 130 of the recruits. The analysis revealed genetic loci suggestively associated with the lipoedema phenotype, with further support provided by an independent cohort taken from the 100,000 Genomes Project. The top SNP rs1409440 (ORmeta ≈ 2.01, Pmeta ≈ 4 x 10–6) is located upstream of LHFPL6, which is thought to be involved with lipoma formation. Exactly how this relates to lipoedema is not yet understood. This first GWAS of a UK lipoedema cohort has identified genetic regions of suggestive association with the disease. Further replication of these findings in different populations is warranted.

Funder

Lipedema Foundation

Wellcome Trust

MRC Metabolic Disease Unit

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre

NIHR Rare Disease Translational Research Collaboration

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference51 articles.

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