Lack of replication of thirteen single-nucleotide polymorphisms implicated in Parkinson's disease: a large-scale international study.

  • Elbaz, Alexis
  • Nelson, Lorene, M.
  • Payami, Haydeh
  • Ioannidis, John, P. A.
  • Fiske, Brian, K.
  • Annesi, Grazia
  • Carmine Belin, Andrea
  • Factor, Stewart, A.
  • Ferrarese, Carlo
  • Hadjigeorgiou, Georgios, M.
  • Higgins, Donald, S.
  • Kawakami, Hideshi
  • Krüger, Rejko
  • Marder, Karen, S.
  • Mayeux, Richard, P.
  • Mellick, George, D.
  • Nutt, John, G.
  • Ritz, Beate
  • Samii, Ali
  • Tanner, Caroline, M.
  • van Broeckhoven, Christine
  • van den Eeden, Stephen, K.
  • Wirdefeldt, Karin
  • Zabetian, Cyrus, P.
  • Dehem, Marie
  • Montimurro, Jennifer, S.
  • Southwick, Audrey
  • Myers, Richard, M.
  • Trikalinos, Thomas, A.
Publication date
November 2006
Publisher
Elsevier

Abstract

International audienceBACKGROUND: A genome-wide association study identified 13 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) significantly associated with Parkinson's disease. Small-scale replication studies were largely non-confirmatory, but a meta-analysis that included data from the original study could not exclude all SNP associations, leaving relevance of several markers uncertain. METHODS: Investigators from three Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research-funded genetics consortia-comprising 14 teams-contributed DNA samples from 5526 patients with Parkinson's disease and 6682 controls, which were genotyped for the 13 SNPs. Most (88%) participants were of white, non-Hispanic descent. We assessed log-additive genetic effects using fix...

Extracted data

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