Do consanguineous parents of a child affected by an autosomal recessive disease have more DNA identical-by-descent than similarly-related parents with healthy offspring? Design of a case-control study

Author:

Teeuw Marieke E,Henneman Lidewij,Bochdanovits Zoltan,Heutink Peter,Kuik Dirk J,Cornel Martina C,ten Kate Leo P

Abstract

Abstract Background The offspring of consanguineous relations have an increased risk of congenital/genetic disorders and early mortality. Consanguineous couples and their offspring account for approximately 10% of the global population. The increased risk for congenital/genetic disorders is most marked for autosomal recessive disorders and depends on the degree of relatedness of the parents. For children of first cousins the increased risk is 2-4%. For individual couples, however, the extra risk can vary from zero to 25% or higher, with only a minority of these couples having an increased risk of at least 25%. It is currently not possible to differentiate between high-and low-risk couples. The quantity of DNA identical-by-descent between couples with the same degree of relatedness shows a remarkable variation. Here we hypothesize that consanguineous partners with children affected by an autosomal recessive disease have more DNA identical-by-descent than similarly-related partners who have only healthy children. The aim of the study is thus to establish whether the amount of DNA identical-by-descent in consanguineous parents of children with an autosomal recessive disease is indeed different from its proportion in consanguineous parents who have healthy children only. Methods/Design This project is designed as a case-control study. Cases are defined as consanguineous couples with one or more children with an autosomal recessive disorder and controls as consanguineous couples with at least three healthy children and no affected child. We aim to include 100 case couples and 100 control couples. Control couples are matched by restricting the search to the same family, clan or ethnic origin as the case couple. Genome-wide SNP arrays will be used to test our hypothesis. Discussion This study contains a new approach to risk assessment in consanguineous couples. There is no previous study on the amount of DNA identical-by-descent in consanguineous parents of affected children compared to the consanguineous parents of healthy children. If our hypothesis proves to be correct, further studies are needed to obtain different risk figure estimates for the different proportions of DNA identical-by-descent. With more precise information about their risk status, empowerment of couples can be improved when making reproductive decisions.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference13 articles.

1. Bittles AH, Black ML: Consanguinity, human evolution, and complex diseases. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2009, 107 (Suppl 1): 1779-1786.

2. Meyer BF: Strategies for the prevention of hereditary diseases in a highly consanguineous population. Ann Hum Biol. 2005, 32: 174-179. 10.1080/03014460500075217.

3. Global prevalence of consanguinity. [http://www.consang.net/index.php/Global_prevalence]

4. World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision Population Database. [http://esa.un.org/unpp]

5. Bennett RL, Motulsky AG, Bittles A, Hudgins L, Uhrich S, Lochner Doyle D, et al: Genetic counseling and screening of consanguineous couples and their offspring: Recommendations of the Nationale Society of Genetic Counselors. J Genet Couns. 2006, 11: 97-119. 10.1023/A:1014593404915.

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