ID

45212

Descripción

Principal Investigator: Joel Hirschhorn, Broad Institute and Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, MA, USA MeSH: Diabetic Nephropathy,Kidney Failure, Chronic,Albuminuria,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1,Diabetes Complications https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs000389 Diabetic kidney disease, or diabetic nephropathy (DN), is one of the leading causes of end-stage renal disease in the United States and worldwide. DN is a common complication of long-standing type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The clinical course is characterized by development of proteinuria and gradual loss of kidney function. Although existing treatments that decrease proteinuria have been shown to moderately abate progression of diabetic kidney disease, many affected patients, who do not die from cardiovascular disease, go on to develop terminal renal failure, necessitating costly renal replacement therapies, such as dialysis and renal transplantation. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) can have its onset in childhood and affected individuals often develop end-stage renal disease in early adulthood, leading to further loss of quality of life. The genetic basis of the disease is not well understood. The GENIE (*GE*netics of *N*ephropathy an *I*nternational *E*ffort) consortium was initiated to perform the most comprehensive and well powered DN susceptibility genome wide association study (GWAS) analysis to date, using the largest collection of type 1 diabetics with and without kidney disease across four study cohorts. The UK-ROI samples were genotyped as part of this project. *UK-ROI Sample Description* The UK-ROI collection consists of samples derived from the Republic of Ireland (Dr. Catherine Godson, PI, at University College, Dublin, Ireland) and the United Kingdom (Warren 3 and Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes UK, *UK GoKinD*, Dr. Alexander P. Maxwell, PI, at Queen's University of Belfast, UK). All study subjects met the inclusion criteria: white individuals with T1D, diagnosed before 31 years of age, whose parents and grandparents were born in the British Isles.

Link

dbGaP study = phs000389

Palabras clave

  1. 2/8/22 2/8/22 - Simon Heim
  2. 12/10/22 12/10/22 - Adrian Schulz
Titular de derechos de autor

Joel Hirschhorn, Broad Institute and Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, MA, USA

Subido en

12 de octubre de 2022

DOI

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Licencia

Creative Commons BY 4.0

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dbGaP phs000389 GENIE UK-ROI Diabetic Nephropathy GWAS

Subject-Sample Mapping

pht002378
Descripción

pht002378

Subject ID
Descripción

SUBJID

Tipo de datos

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C2348585
Sample ID
Descripción

SAMPID

Tipo de datos

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C1299222
Source repository where samples originate
Descripción

SAMP_SOURCE

Tipo de datos

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C0449416
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C3847505
Sample ID used in the Source Repository
Descripción

SOURCE_SAMPID

Tipo de datos

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C1299222
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C0449416
UMLS CUI [1,3]
C3847505

Similar models

Subject-Sample Mapping

Name
Tipo
Description | Question | Decode (Coded Value)
Tipo de datos
Alias
Item Group
pht002378
SUBJID
Item
Subject ID
string
C2348585 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
SAMPID
Item
Sample ID
string
C1299222 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
SAMP_SOURCE
Item
Source repository where samples originate
string
C0449416 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C3847505 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
SOURCE_SAMPID
Item
Sample ID used in the Source Repository
string
C1299222 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C0449416 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
C3847505 (UMLS CUI [1,3])

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