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A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis

INTRODUCTION: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is more common in females than males and sex steroid hormones may in part explain this difference. We conducted a case–control study nested within two prospective studies to determine the associations between plasma steroid hormones measured prior to RA onset...

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Autores principales: Karlson, Elizabeth W, Chibnik, Lori B, McGrath, Monica, Chang, Shun-Chiao, Keenan, Brendan T, Costenbader, Karen H, Fraser, Patricia A, Tworoger, Shelley, Hankinson, Susan E, Lee, I-Min, Buring, Julie, De Vivo, Immaculata
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2714153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19555469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2742
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author Karlson, Elizabeth W
Chibnik, Lori B
McGrath, Monica
Chang, Shun-Chiao
Keenan, Brendan T
Costenbader, Karen H
Fraser, Patricia A
Tworoger, Shelley
Hankinson, Susan E
Lee, I-Min
Buring, Julie
De Vivo, Immaculata
author_facet Karlson, Elizabeth W
Chibnik, Lori B
McGrath, Monica
Chang, Shun-Chiao
Keenan, Brendan T
Costenbader, Karen H
Fraser, Patricia A
Tworoger, Shelley
Hankinson, Susan E
Lee, I-Min
Buring, Julie
De Vivo, Immaculata
author_sort Karlson, Elizabeth W
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is more common in females than males and sex steroid hormones may in part explain this difference. We conducted a case–control study nested within two prospective studies to determine the associations between plasma steroid hormones measured prior to RA onset and polymorphisms in the androgen receptor (AR), estrogen receptor 2 (ESR2), aromatase (CYP19) and progesterone receptor (PGR) genes and RA risk. METHODS: We genotyped AR, ESR2, CYP19, PGR SNPs and the AR CAG repeat in RA case–control studies nested within the Nurses' Health Study (NHS), NHS II (449 RA cases, 449 controls) and the Women's Health Study (72 cases, and 202 controls). All controls were matched on cohort, age, Caucasian race, menopausal status, and postmenopausal hormone use. We measured plasma dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), testosterone, and sex hormone binding globulin in 132 pre-RA samples and 396 matched controls in the NHS cohorts. We used conditional logistic regression models adjusted for potential confounders to assess RA risk. RESULTS: Mean age of RA diagnosis was 55 years in both cohorts; 58% of cases were rheumatoid factor positive at diagnosis. There was no significant association between plasma DHEAS, total testosterone, or calculated free testosterone and risk of future RA. There was no association between individual variants or haplotypes in any of the genes and RA or seropositive RA, nor any association for the AR CAG repeat. CONCLUSIONS: Steroid hormone levels measured at a single time point prior to RA onset were not associated with RA risk in this study. Our findings do not suggest that androgens or the AR, ESR2, PGR, and CYP19 genes are important to RA risk in women.
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spelling pubmed-27141532009-07-22 A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis Karlson, Elizabeth W Chibnik, Lori B McGrath, Monica Chang, Shun-Chiao Keenan, Brendan T Costenbader, Karen H Fraser, Patricia A Tworoger, Shelley Hankinson, Susan E Lee, I-Min Buring, Julie De Vivo, Immaculata Arthritis Res Ther Research Article INTRODUCTION: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is more common in females than males and sex steroid hormones may in part explain this difference. We conducted a case–control study nested within two prospective studies to determine the associations between plasma steroid hormones measured prior to RA onset and polymorphisms in the androgen receptor (AR), estrogen receptor 2 (ESR2), aromatase (CYP19) and progesterone receptor (PGR) genes and RA risk. METHODS: We genotyped AR, ESR2, CYP19, PGR SNPs and the AR CAG repeat in RA case–control studies nested within the Nurses' Health Study (NHS), NHS II (449 RA cases, 449 controls) and the Women's Health Study (72 cases, and 202 controls). All controls were matched on cohort, age, Caucasian race, menopausal status, and postmenopausal hormone use. We measured plasma dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), testosterone, and sex hormone binding globulin in 132 pre-RA samples and 396 matched controls in the NHS cohorts. We used conditional logistic regression models adjusted for potential confounders to assess RA risk. RESULTS: Mean age of RA diagnosis was 55 years in both cohorts; 58% of cases were rheumatoid factor positive at diagnosis. There was no significant association between plasma DHEAS, total testosterone, or calculated free testosterone and risk of future RA. There was no association between individual variants or haplotypes in any of the genes and RA or seropositive RA, nor any association for the AR CAG repeat. CONCLUSIONS: Steroid hormone levels measured at a single time point prior to RA onset were not associated with RA risk in this study. Our findings do not suggest that androgens or the AR, ESR2, PGR, and CYP19 genes are important to RA risk in women. BioMed Central 2009 2009-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC2714153/ /pubmed/19555469 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2742 Text en Copyright © 2009 Karlson et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
spellingShingle Research Article
Karlson, Elizabeth W
Chibnik, Lori B
McGrath, Monica
Chang, Shun-Chiao
Keenan, Brendan T
Costenbader, Karen H
Fraser, Patricia A
Tworoger, Shelley
Hankinson, Susan E
Lee, I-Min
Buring, Julie
De Vivo, Immaculata
A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title_full A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title_fullStr A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title_full_unstemmed A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title_short A prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
title_sort prospective study of androgen levels, hormone-related genes and risk of rheumatoid arthritis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2714153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19555469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/ar2742
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