Title: Genetic-Environmental Interaction: Implications for Osteoporosis Prevention Strategies
1Genetic-Environmental InteractionImplications
for Osteoporosis Prevention Strategies
2How many Australians have osteoporosis?
Current
Increased BMD by 10
x1000
x1000
3Annual incidence of fractures in Australia?
All fractures
Hip fractures
x1000
x1000
Year
Year
4- Can we
- predict,
- reduce,
- prevent,
- eliminate
- osteoporosis and fractures?
5Aetiology
- Mendelian
- Chromosomal aetiology
- Multifactorial aetiology with high heritability
- Multifactorial aetiology with low heritability
- Infectious aetiology
- Environmental aetiology
6Determinants of BMD
- Genetics Environment
- Lumbar spine 0.778 0.222
- Femoral neck 0.764 0.236
- Total body 0.786 0.214
7- Can we use environmental factors to predict
fracture? - Can we use genetic factors to predict fracture?
8Criteria
- Validity and available of tests
- Public health impact
- Magnitude of association between risk factor and
fracture - Interaction between known environmental factors
and genes - Availability of safe and efficacious treatment
- Confidentiality, ethics
9Risk Factors for Hip Fx in Females
Risk factor Relative Risk
Prevalence AR
Osteoporosis 1 (Y/N) 7.9 (3.9 -
16.1) 0.26 0.65 Body sway (75th pct) 3.6 (1.8
- 7.0) 0.25 0.48 Previous falls (Y/N) 3.5
(1.8 - 6.9) 0.31 0.44 Any of the three factors
22.9 (3.1 - 34.7) 0.60 0.93
1 Defined by FNBMD
10Distribution of BMD incidence of fractures
11Familial Relative Risk of Fracture
- Intraclass correlation
- RR of BMD r0.8 r0.9
- _________________________________________________
- 5 1.14 1.16
- 6 1.17 1.20
- 7 1.21 1.24
- 8 1.24 1.28
- _________________________________________________
12Strategies for Prevention of Osteoporosis
- Population-based strategy
- High risk strategy
- Genetic-environmental based strategy ?
13Some Epidemiological Concepts
- Population Attributable Risk (PAF)
- proportion by which the incidence rate of disease
in the population would be reduced if the risk
factors were eliminated - Positive Predictive Value (PPV)
- Risk of disease among individuals with the
presence of a risk factor
14General Formulation of a Screening Model
- Parameters
- Lifetime risk of fracture (d)
- Prevalence of risk factor (e)
- Relative risk of risk factor (R)
- Sensitivity, Specificity and PPV
- Sensitivity R / (1 e(R-1)
- Specificity (1-e)/(1-d) 1 - Rd/(1 e(R-1))
- PPV Rd / (1 e(R-1))
15Effectiveness
Strategy Fx Reduction Sens Spec PPV
__________________________________________________
_____________ Population-based
1 20 0.625 0.467 0.714 High risk 2
9 0.952 0.275 0.476 ____________________________
___________________________________ Assumptions
Lifetime risk 0.4 RR 5 1 Shift the whole
distribution by 10 increase 2 Selecting only
osteoporotic subjects and increase BMD by 10
16- What about an genetic-environmental approach ?
17What is Gene-Environment Interaction?
- Effects of high risk genotypes vary depending on
environmental exposure or restricted to exposed
subjects - Effects of environmental risk factor vary
depending on susceptible genotypes
18 . . . more emphasis has been placed on the
concept of "effect" rather than on
"interaction". There is no reason to
believe that VDR gene would act in isolation
from other genetic and environmental
factors
19Some Misunderstanding
- A single, simple observation of differential
effect between genotypes of a genetic marker
across different environmental milieu is not
sufficient evidence for genetic-environmental
interaction - A statistical interaction is not necessary the
same with a GxE interaction
20Detection of GxE Interaction?
- Twin modelling
- Regression analysis
- Sibling interaction analysis
21Heritability of Bone Density
Age rMZ rDZ H2 LSBMD Slemenda et
al 44 0.85 0.33 0.97 Pocock et
al 47 0.92 0.36 0.92 Nguyen et
al 50 0.74 0.43 0.78 Spector et
al 60 0.68 0.29 0.78 Flicker et
al 69 0.70 0.33 0.74
22Formulation of G x E Models
- Parameters
- Lifetime risk of fracture (d)
- Prevalence of risk factor (e)
- Relative risk of risk factor (R)
- Prevalence of genotype (g)
Formulation Genotype Risk Prevalence RR Absence
Absence (1-g)(1-e) 1 Absence Presence (1-g)e Re
Presence Absence (1-e)g Rg Presence Presence ge
Rge
23Models of Interaction
- Model I Re Rg 1
- Model II Re gt 1, Rg 1
- Model III Rg gt 1, Re 1
- Model IV Re gt 1, Rg gt 1
24Effects of GxE on PPV and PAF
- g No GxE Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
Multiplicative - __________________________________________________
___________________________________ - 0.1 0.22 1.00 (0.23) 0.75 (0.12) 0.56
(0.15) 0.82 (0.14) - 0.15 0.23 0.89 (0.23) 0.56 (0.12) 0.27
(0.09) 0.72 (0.18) - 0.20 0.23 0.69 (0.23) 0.46 (0.12) 0.15
(0.04) 0.64 (0.21) - 0.30 0.23 0.50 (0.23) 0.37 (0.13) 0.06
(0.02) 0.52 (0.23) - 0.40 0.23 0.40 (0.23) 0.32 (0.13) 0.03
(0.01) 0.44 (0.25) - d0.15, R 2, e 0.30
25Summary
- For a RR2 or 3, low PPV and PAF
- Introduction of GxE increases PPV, but decreases
PAF - High prevalence of susceptible genotype increases
PAF, but decreases PPV
26Future Directions
- Description of osteoporosis/fx in populationgene
frequencies, prevalence of risk factors - Determinants of osteo/fx in population risk
factors, genetic markers, population genetics. - Determination of osteo/fx in families familial
aggregation, heritability studies, segregation
studies - Gene environmental studies
27Future Directions
- Natural history of osteporosis
- Intervention clinical trials, genetic
differences in response to treatments - Prevention screening, counselling, carrier
detection - Impact of osteoporosis mortality, morbidity, QoL