Heritability of glomerulonephritis: A Swedish adoption study

Delshad Saleh Akrawi, Bengt Zöller, Erik Fjellstedt, Jan Sundquist, Kristina Sundquist, Mir Nabi PirouziFard

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Glomerulonephritis clusters in families. However, infections are common inducers of glomerulonephritis and may also cluster in families. Studies of adoptees and their biological and adoptive parents may disentangle genetic from environmental causes of familial clustering. This is the first adoption study aimed to estimate the genetic contribution to the familial transmission of glomerulonephritis. Materials and methods: We performed a family study for Swedish-born adoptees (born 1945–2000) and their biological and adoptive parents. The Swedish Multi-Generation Register was linked to the Hospital Inpatient Register for the period 1964–2012 and the Hospital Outpatient Register for 2001–2012. Odds ratio (OR) for glomerulonephritis was determined for adoptees with a biological parent with glomerulonephritis compared with adoptees without an affected biological parent. Similarly, the OR for glomerulonephritis was also determined in adoptees with an affected adoptive parent compared with adoptees without an affected adoptive parent. Heritability was estimated to be twice the observed tetrachoric correlation among adoptees and biological parents, under the assumption that only additive genetic factors contribute to the similarity between biological parents and adoptees. Results: The OR for glomerulonephritis was 4.08 in adoptees (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.79-9.27, P-value = 0.001) of biological parents diagnosed with glomerulonephritis. The OR for glomerulonephritis was 1.67 in adoptees (95% CI 0.53-5.26, P-value = 0.380) of adoptive parents diagnosed with glomerulonephritis. The heritability was 48%. Conclusion: Family history of glomerulonephritis in a biological parent is a risk factor for glomerulonephritis. The present study indicates that genetic factors play an important role in the aetiology of glomerulonephritis.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13148
JournalEuropean Journal of Clinical Investigation
Volume49
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • adoption
  • epidemiology
  • genetics
  • glomerulonephritis
  • kidney diseases

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Heritability of glomerulonephritis: A Swedish adoption study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this