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Received on October 19, 2007
Accepted on November 14, 2007
Other Areas of Clinical Chemistry |
1 Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, and Donald W Reynolds Center for Cardiovascular Research, Harvard Medical School, Boston
2 Amgen, Inc, Cambridge, MA
3 Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston
4 Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, and Donald W Reynolds Center for Cardiovascular Research, Harvard Medical School, Boston, and Amgen, Inc, Cambridge, MA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: pridker{at}partners.org.
primary aim of the Women's Genome Health Study (WGHS) is to create a comprehensive, fully searchable genome-wide database of >360 000 single nucleotide polymorphisms among at least 25 000 initially healthy American women participating in the ongoing NIH-funded Women's Health Study (WHS). These women have already been followed over a 12-year period for major incident health events including but not limited to myocardial infarction, stroke, cancer, diabetes, osteoporosis, venous-thromboembolism, cognitive decline, and common visual disorders such as age- related macular degeneration and cataracts. Investigations within the WGHS will seek to identify relevant patterns of genetic polymorphism that predict future disease states in otherwise healthy American women, and to evaluate patterns of genetic polymorphism that relate to multiple intermediate phenotypes including blood-based determinants of disease that were measured at baseline for each study participant. By linking genome-wide data to the existing epidemiologic databank of the parent WHS, which includes comprehensive dietary, behavioral, and traditional exposure data on each participant since cohort inception in 1992, the WGHS will also allow exploration of gene-environment and gene-gene interactions as they relate to incident disease states. Thus, with continued follow-up of the WHS, the WGHS provides a unique scientific resource—a full-cohort, prospective, genome-wide association study among initially healthy American women.
The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:
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T. A. Pearson and T. A. Manolio How to Interpret a Genome-wide Association Study JAMA, March 19, 2008; 299(11): 1335 - 1344. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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