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Quality of Care Research Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health genomics Clinical Genetics/ EMGO Institute for Health & Care Research
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Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Quality of CareResearch Programme >

Comorbidity:The aetiological / genetic perspective

Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health genomics

Clinical Genetics/EMGO Institute for Health & Care Research

Page 2: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Definition “condition”

Comorbidity: co-existent “conditions”

• Etiology → pathology → manifestation

• Disease → impairment → disability → handicap

WHO, ICIDH, 1980

• Question of patient relates to consequences of disease:

– Feel sad, apathy, headache, cannot go to work, do not manage to perform daily activities, diminished participation, lack of social integration

Page 3: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Definition “condition”

• Comorbidity: co-existent “conditions”:

• Etiology → pathology → manifestation

• Disease → impairment → disability → handicap

WHO, ICIDH, 1980

• Etiology or pathology or disease or impairment?

Epilepsy, dementia, depression?

Page 4: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Etiological diagnosis in genetics

• Down syndrome due to translocation of chromosomes #21 & 14, inherited from mother

• Epicanthus, simian crease, congenital cardiac anomaly

Page 5: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Patterns of malformations in genetics

• Syndromes: Consistent and recognizable patterns of abnormalities for which there will often be a known underlying cause (Down; one cause, several effects)

• Sequences: Consequence of a cascade of events initiated by a single primary factor (Potter: renal agenesis → oligohydramnios → pulmonary hypoplasia and fetal compression → dislocation of hips and talipes).

• Associations: non-random occurrence of abnormalities that cannot be explained on the basis of a sequence or syndrome.

Emery, 2007

Page 6: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Comorbidity: Causes? Consequences?

• Syndromes: One cause, several consequences

• Sequences: Cause, consequence, consequence of consequence

• Associations: recognized pattern in the absence of satisfactory underlying explanation

Page 7: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Recent developments in genetics/genomics

• One gene, one disease (1990-2000)

• Human genome sequenced (2001)

• Genomics research (2001 →)

– Function of genes

– DNA, RNA, proteins, metabolites

– High throughput

– Common disorders

– Multifactorial disorders

Page 8: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

One gene, one disease

Heutink 1994

Page 9: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

One gene, one disease

Heutink 1994

Page 10: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Common disease, common variant?

Heutink 1994

Page 11: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controls

The Welcome Trust Case Control

Consortium, Nature 2007

Page 12: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Contributing factors in causal models

Janssens 2008

Page 13: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

One disease, several genes; One gene, several diseases

Frazer et al. Nat Rev Genet 2009

Page 14: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Common diseases, common pathways

Zhernakova et al 2009

Page 15: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Comorbidity and genetics

Monocausal

• One genotype, several consequences (del 22q11→ cleft palate & schizophrenia & bipolar disorder)

Multifactorial

• Gene variant associated with increased risk of several multifactorial disorders

• Gene function gives information about pathway (pathogenesis)

• Treatment/prevention based on pathway

Page 16: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Comorbidity and genetics

• The challenge in 2009 for common complex disorders:

– Homogeneous subgroups (define phenotype)

– Identify genes involved in multifactorial disorders

– Identify common pathways

– Develop treatment (or prevention) tailored to pathway → both co-existent disorders

Page 17: Quality of CareResearch Programme > Comorbidity: The aetiological / genetic perspective Martina C. Cornel, professor of community genetics & public health.

Take home message

• Comorbidity may reflect common etiological pathway

– One gene/one cause or

– Multiple susceptibility genes

• Genetics/genomics can help to identify common pathways