Associations between attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder genetic liability and ICD-10 medical conditions in adults: Utilizing electronic health records in a Phenome-Wide Association Study

Author:

Haan ElisORCID,Krebs KristiORCID,Võsa Urmo,Brikell IsabellORCID,Larsson Henrik,Lehto Kelli,

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAttention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is often comorbid with other medical conditions in adult patients. However, ADHD is extremely underdiagnosed in adults and little is known about the medical comorbidities in undiagnosed adult individuals with high ADHD liability. In this study we investigated associations between ADHD genetic liability and electronic health record (EHR)-based ICD-10 diagnoses across all diagnostic categories, in individuals without ADHD diagnosis history.MethodsWe used data from the Estonian Biobank cohort (N=111,261) and generated polygenic risk scores (PRS) for ADHD (PRSADHD) based on the latest ADHD genome-wide association study. We performed a phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) to test for associations between standardized PRSADHDand 1,515 EHR-based ICD-10 diagnoses in the full and sex-stratified sample. We compared the observed significant ICD-10 associations to associations with: 1) ADHD diagnosis and 2) questionnaire-based high ADHD risk analyses.ResultsAfter Bonferroni correction (p=3.3×10−5) we identified 80 medical conditions associated with PRSADHD. The strongest evidence was seen with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (OR=1.15, CI=1.11-1.18), obesity (OR=1.13, CI=1.11-1.15), and type 2 diabetes (OR=1.11, CI=1.09-1.14). Sex-stratified analysis generally showed similar associations in males and females. Out of all identified associations, 40% and 78% were also observed using ADHD diagnosis or questionnaire-based ADHD, respectively, as the predictor.ConclusionsOverall our findings indicate that ADHD genetic liability is associated with an increased risk of a substantial number of medical conditions in undiagnosed individuals. These results highlight the need for timely detection and improved management of ADHD symptoms in adults.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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