A survey of functional dyspepsia in 361,360 individuals: Phenotypic and genetic cross-disease analyses

Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2022 Jun;34(6):e14236. doi: 10.1111/nmo.14236. Epub 2021 Aug 11.

Abstract

Background: Functional dyspepsia (FD) is a common gastrointestinal condition of poorly understood pathophysiology. While symptoms' overlap with other conditions may indicate common pathogenetic mechanisms, genetic predisposition is suspected but has not been adequately investigated.

Methods: Using healthcare, questionnaire, and genetic data from three large population-based biobanks (UK Biobank, EGCUT, and MGI), we surveyed FD comorbidities, heritability, and genetic correlations across a wide spectrum of conditions and traits in 10,078 cases and 351,282 non-FD controls of European ancestry.

Key results: In UK Biobank, 281 diagnoses were detected at increased prevalence in FD, based on healthcare records. Among these, gastrointestinal conditions (OR = 4.0, p < 1.0 × 10-300 ), anxiety disorders (OR = 2.3, p < 1.4 × 10-27 ), ischemic heart disease (OR = 2.2, p < 2.3 × 10-76 ), and infectious and parasitic diseases (OR = 2.1, p = 1.5 × 10-73 ) showed strongest association with FD. Similar results were obtained in an analysis of self-reported conditions and use of medications from questionnaire data. Based on a genome-wide association meta-analysis of genotypes across all cohorts, FD heritability was estimated close to 5% ( hSNP2 = 0.047, p = 0.014). Genetic correlations indicate FD predisposition is shared with several other diseases and traits (rg > 0.344), mostly overlapping with those also enriched in FD patients. Suggestive (p < 5.0 × 10-6 ) association with FD risk was detected for 13 loci, with 2 showing nominal replication (p < 0.05) in an independent cohort of 192 FD patients.

Conclusions & inferences: FD has a weak heritable component that shows commonalities with multiple conditions across a wide spectrum of pathophysiological domains. This new knowledge contributes to a better understanding of FD etiology and may have implications for improving its treatment.

Keywords: biobank studies; comorbidities; functional dyspepsia; genetics; genome-wide association study.

Publication types

  • Meta-Analysis
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Crosses, Genetic
  • Dyspepsia* / diagnosis
  • Dyspepsia* / epidemiology
  • Dyspepsia* / genetics
  • Gastrointestinal Diseases*
  • Genetic Predisposition to Disease
  • Genome-Wide Association Study
  • Humans
  • Surveys and Questionnaires