Publication | Open Access
Discovery of the first genome-wide significant risk loci for ADHD
182
Citations
85
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
Adhd SymptomsGeneticsGenetic FoundationDisease Gene IdentificationGenomicsSocial SciencesGenome-wide Association StudiesGenome-wide Association StudyAdhdGenotype-phenotype AssociationPsychiatric GeneticsNeurogeneticsAdhd CasesQuantitative GeneticsPsychiatryStatistical GeneticsGenetic FactorAdhd SusceptibilityNeuroscienceMedicine
Abstract Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a highly heritable childhood behavioral disorder affecting 5% of school-age children and 2.5% of adults. Common genetic variants contribute substantially to ADHD susceptibility, but no individual variants have been robustly associated with ADHD. We report a genome-wide association meta-analysis of 20,183 ADHD cases and 35,191 controls that identifies variants surpassing genome-wide significance in 12 independent loci, revealing new and important information on the underlying biology of ADHD. Associations are enriched in evolutionarily constrained genomic regions and loss-of-function intolerant genes, as well as around brain-expressed regulatory marks. These findings, based on clinical interviews and/or medical records are supported by additional analyses of a self-reported ADHD sample and a study of quantitative measures of ADHD symptoms in the population. Meta-analyzing these data with our primary scan yielded a total of 16 genome-wide significant loci. The results support the hypothesis that clinical diagnosis of ADHD is an extreme expression of one or more continuous heritable traits.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1