Disentangling the comorbidity between allergic disease and type 1 diabetes using genetically informative designs
Awad I. Smew, Tong Gong, Ralf Kuja-Halkola, Cecilia Lundholm, Arvid Harder, Yi Lu, Lars Sävendahl, Paul Lichtenstein, Bronwyn K. Brew, Catarina Almqvist

TL;DR
The study explores the co-occurrence of allergic diseases and type 1 diabetes in children, finding shared familial factors but little genetic overlap.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the familial and genetic relationships between allergic diseases and type 1 diabetes using population-based and genetic analyses.
Findings
Asthma, allergic rhinitis, and eczema are associated with an increased risk of type 1 diabetes.
Familial coaggregation is observed for asthma and allergic rhinitis but not for eczema.
Genetic overlap between allergic diseases and type 1 diabetes is not strongly supported by molecular genetic analyses.
Abstract
Previous research has demonstrated co-occurrence of asthma and type 1 diabetes in children, but the relationship is not as clear between allergic rhinitis or eczema and type 1 diabetes. Shared familial factors could explain a comorbidity, but the genetic overlap remains to be examined. The aim was to further the etiologic understanding of the comorbidity between allergic disease and type 1 diabetes. A Swedish population-based cohort of 3 million children born 1987-2017 was linked to nationwide registers. Associations between each allergic disease and type 1 diabetes were estimated within individuals and the familial coaggregation between relatives. For the genetic overlap, linkage disequilibrium score regression was applied on the basis of genome-wide association studies. In genotyped individuals from the Swedish Twin Registry, polygenic risk scores were developed to test the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes and associated disorders
