Feasibility of salivary DNA collection in a population-based case-control study: a pilot study of pediatric Crohn's disease.

dc.contributor.author

Kappelman, Michael D

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Lange, Aksel

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Randell, Rachel L

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Basta, Patricia V

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Sandler, Robert S

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Laugesen, Kristina

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Byrjalsen, Anna

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Christensen, Tina

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Frøslev, Trine

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Erichsen, Rune

dc.date.accessioned

2023-09-12T18:29:17Z

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2023-09-12T18:29:17Z

dc.date.issued

2018-01

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2023-09-12T18:29:16Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Epidemiologic studies combining exposure and outcome data with the collection of biosamples are needed to study gene-environment interactions that might contribute to the etiology of complex diseases such as pediatric Crohn's disease (CD). Nationwide registries, including those in Denmark and other Scandinavian countries, provide efficient and reliable sources of data for epidemiological studies evaluating the environmental determinants of disease. We performed a pilot study to test the feasibility of collecting salivary DNA to augment registry data in established cases of pediatric CD and randomly selected, population-based controls.

Subjects and methods

Cases of CD born after 1995 and residing in the central region of Denmark were identified through the Danish National Patient Registry and confirmed by using standard diagnostic criteria. Age- and gender-matched controls were selected at random through the civil registration system. Cases and controls were contacted by mail and telephone and invited to submit a saliva sample. DNA was extracted and genotyped for six CD-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).

Results

A total of 53 cases of pediatric CD were invited, and 40 contributed a saliva sample (75% response rate). A total of 126 controls were invited, and 54 contributed a saliva sample (44% response rate). As expected, demographic characteristics did not differ between cases and controls. DNA was successfully isolated from 93 of 94 samples. Genotyping was performed with only 2% undetermined genotypes. For five of six SNPs known to be associated with CD, risk allele frequencies were higher in cases than controls.

Conclusion

This pilot study strongly supports the feasibility of augmenting traditional epidemiological data from Danish population-based registries with the de novo collection of genetic information from population-based cases and controls. This will facilitate rigorous studies of gene-environment interactions in complex chronic conditions such as CD.
dc.identifier

clep-10-215

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1179-1349

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1179-1349

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28997

dc.language

eng

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Informa UK Limited

dc.relation.ispartof

Clinical epidemiology

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10.2147/clep.s143322

dc.subject

Crohn’s disease

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DNA

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SNP

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children

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genetic

dc.title

Feasibility of salivary DNA collection in a population-based case-control study: a pilot study of pediatric Crohn's disease.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Randell, Rachel L|0000-0002-8009-8209

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215

pubs.end-page

222

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Pediatrics

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Pediatrics, Rheumatology

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

10

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