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Published Online
on March 6, 2008

Stroke. 2008
Published online before print March 6, 2008, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.502930
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2008
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Right arrow Genetics of Stroke

Submitted on August 27, 2007
Revised on September 16, 2007
Accepted on October 1, 2007

Genome Screen to Detect Linkage to Intracranial Aneurysm Susceptibility Genes. The Familial Intracranial Aneurysm (FIA) Study

Tatiana Foroud PhD*; Laura Sauerbeck MS; Robert Brown MD; Craig Anderson MD; Daniel Woo MD; Dawn Kleindorfer MD; Matthew L. Flaherty MD; Ranjan Deka PhD; Richard Hornung PhD; Irene Meissner MD; Joan E. Bailey-Wilson PhD; Guy Rouleau MD, PhD; E. Sander Connolly MD; Dongbing Lai MS; Daniel L. Koller PhD; John Huston III MD; Joseph P. Broderick MD; the FIA Study Investigators

From the Indiana University School of Medicine (T.F., D.L., D.L.K.); the University of Cincinnati School of Medicine (L.S., D.W., D.K., M.L.F., R.D., J.P.B.), Ohio; the Mayo Clinic (R.B., I.M., J.H.), Rochester, Minn; The George Institute for International Health, University of Sydney (C.A.), Sydney, Australia; the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (R.H.), Ohio; the National Human Genome Research Institute (J.E.B.-W.), Baltimore, Md; Notre Dame Hospital (G.R.), Montreal, Canada; and Columbia University (E.S.C.), New York, NY.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: tforoud{at}iupui.edu.

Background and Purpose—Evidence supports a substantial genetic contribution to the risk of intracranial aneurysm (IA). The purpose of this study was to identify chromosomal regions likely to harbor genes that contribute to the risk of IA.

Methods—Multiplex families having at least 2 individuals with "definite" or "probable" IA were ascertained through an international consortium. First-degree relatives of individuals with IA who were at increased risk of an IA because of a history of hypertension or present smoking were offered cerebral magnetic resonance angiography. A genome screen was completed using the Illumina 6K SNP system, and the resulting data from 192 families, containing 1155 genotyped individuals, were analyzed. Narrow and broad disease definitions were used when testing for linkage using multipoint model-independent methods. Ordered subset analysis was performed to test for a genexsmoking (pack-years) interaction.

Results—The greatest evidence of linkage was found on chromosomes 4 (LOD=2.5; 156 cM), 7 (LOD=1.7; 183 cM), 8 (LOD=1.9; 70 cM), and 12 (LOD=1.6; 102 cM) using the broad disease definition. Using the average pack-years for the affected individuals in each family, the genes on chromosomes 4 (LOD=3.5; P=0.03), 7 (LOD=4.1; P=0.01) and 12 (LOD=3.6; P=0.02) all appear to be modulated by the degree of smoking in the affected members of the family. On chromosome 8, inclusion of smoking as a covariate did not significantly strengthen the linkage evidence, suggesting no interaction between the loci in this region and smoking.

Conclusions—We have detected possible evidence of linkage to 4 chromosomal regions. There is potential evidence for a genexsmoking interaction with 3 of the loci.


Key words: intracranial aneurysm • linkage • single nucleotide polymorphism • gene x environment interaction • smoking