Design and implementation of the international genetics and translational research in transplantation network

BJ Keating, J Van Setten, PA Jacobson… - …, 2015 - d-scholarship.pitt.edu
BJ Keating, J Van Setten, PA Jacobson, MV Holmes, SS Verma, HR Chandrupatla, N Nair…
Transplantation, 2015d-scholarship.pitt.edu
Background. Genetic association studies of transplantation outcomes have been hampered
by small samples and highly complex multifactorial phenotypes, hindering investigations of
the genetic architecture of a range of comorbidities which significantly impact graft and
recipient life expectancy. We describe here the rationale and design of the International
Genetics & Translational Research in Transplantation Network. The network comprises 22
studies to date, including 16 494 transplant recipients and 11 669 donors, of whom more …
Background
Genetic association studies of transplantation outcomes have been hampered by small samples and highly complex multifactorial phenotypes, hindering investigations of the genetic architecture of a range of comorbidities which significantly impact graft and recipient life expectancy. We describe here the rationale and design of the International Genetics & Translational Research in Transplantation Network. The network comprises 22 studies to date, including 16 494 transplant recipients and 11 669 donors, of whom more than 5000 are of non-European ancestry, all of whom have existing genomewide genotype data sets.
Methods
We describe the rich genetic and phenotypic information available in this consortium comprising heart, kidney, liver, and lung transplant cohorts.
Results
We demonstrate significant power in International Genetics & Translational Research in Transplantation Network to detect main effect association signals across regions such as the MHC region as well as genomewide for transplant outcomes that span all solid organs, such as graft survival, acute rejection, new onset of diabetes after transplantation, and for delayed graft function in kidney only.
Conclusions
This consortium is designed and statistically powered to deliver pioneering insights into the genetic architecture of transplant-related outcomes across a range of different solid-organ transplant studies. The study design allows a spectrum of analyses to be performed including recipient-only analyses, donor-recipient HLA mismatches with focus on loss-of-function variants and nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms.
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