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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Analysis of Complex Genetic Traits in Population Cohorts using High-throughput Genotyping Technology

Dahlgren, Andreas January 2007 (has links)
<p>Most human traits and common diseases have a complex genetic makeup involving more than one gene. The work presented in this thesis investigates standing body height and the common disease type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In study I we analyzed two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the TCF7L2 gene that had been shown to be associated with T2DM. Analysis was performed in the ULSAM population cohort of ~1500 males. We were able to replicate the association to type 2 diabetes and in addition to that we made a novel find, showing association between the risk alleles and increased proinsulin levels. In study II we analyzed four genes identified to be associated with T2DM in a genome-wide association study. We analyzed SNPs in these genes in the ULSAM population cohort and found an association between SNPs in the HHEX gene and insulin responses and insulin levels. </p><p>The aim of studies III-V was to identify genes affecting normal variation in standing body height. Using a candidate gene approach in study III, 17 genes were screened in the ULSAM population cohort using SNPs. A suggestive association of the ESR1 gene with height was found and confirmed as significant in males from the PIVUS population cohort. In study IV, as a part of the GenomEUtwin project, we performed genetic fine mapping of a linked locus for body height on the X-chromosome. By analyzing 1377 SNPs in 780 Finnish twins, we mapped a region spanning 65kb of this locus with linkage to body height in males. This region contains the GPC3 and PHF6 genes that have known connections to syndromes were standing body height is affected. In study V significant linkage and association to standing body height in males was found for the COL1A11 gene, using population cohorts from Finland and Iceland. </p>
2

Analysis of Complex Genetic Traits in Population Cohorts using High-throughput Genotyping Technology

Dahlgren, Andreas January 2007 (has links)
Most human traits and common diseases have a complex genetic makeup involving more than one gene. The work presented in this thesis investigates standing body height and the common disease type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In study I we analyzed two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the TCF7L2 gene that had been shown to be associated with T2DM. Analysis was performed in the ULSAM population cohort of ~1500 males. We were able to replicate the association to type 2 diabetes and in addition to that we made a novel find, showing association between the risk alleles and increased proinsulin levels. In study II we analyzed four genes identified to be associated with T2DM in a genome-wide association study. We analyzed SNPs in these genes in the ULSAM population cohort and found an association between SNPs in the HHEX gene and insulin responses and insulin levels. The aim of studies III-V was to identify genes affecting normal variation in standing body height. Using a candidate gene approach in study III, 17 genes were screened in the ULSAM population cohort using SNPs. A suggestive association of the ESR1 gene with height was found and confirmed as significant in males from the PIVUS population cohort. In study IV, as a part of the GenomEUtwin project, we performed genetic fine mapping of a linked locus for body height on the X-chromosome. By analyzing 1377 SNPs in 780 Finnish twins, we mapped a region spanning 65kb of this locus with linkage to body height in males. This region contains the GPC3 and PHF6 genes that have known connections to syndromes were standing body height is affected. In study V significant linkage and association to standing body height in males was found for the COL1A11 gene, using population cohorts from Finland and Iceland.
3

Prostate Cancer; Metabolic Risk Factors, Drug Utilisation, Adverse Drug Reactions

Grundmark, Birgitta January 2013 (has links)
Increased possibilities during the last decades for early detection of prostate cancer have sparked research on preventable or treatable risk factors and on improvements in therapy. Treatments of the disease still entail significant side effects potentially affecting men during the rest of their lives. The studies of the present thesis concern different aspects of prostate cancer from etiological risk factors and factors influencing treatment to an improved methodology for the detection of treatment side effects. Papers I, II, both based in the population based cohort ULSAM (Uppsala Longitudinal Study of Adult Men), investigate possible risk factors of prostate cancer with options for intervention: selenium levels and the metabolic syndrome. The phenomenon of competing risk of death from other causes than prostate cancer and its impact on and importance for choice of statistical methods is also exemplified and discussed for the first time in prostate cancer research. -Smokers with low selenium status have an increased future risk of later development of prostate cancer. Influence of genetic variability appears plausible. -The metabolic syndrome and especially its increased waist circumference component are associated with later development of prostate cancer – taking competing risks of death from other causes into account. Papers III and IV using pharmacoepidemiological methods investigate aspects of drug utilisation in prostate cancer using nationwide and international databases. In Paper III factors influencing anti-androgen use in prostate cancer are investigated, both from a prescriber- and patient perspective.  The age and disease risk group of the patient, unsupported scientifically, influence both the prescribers’ choice of dose and the patients’ adherence to treatment. -Adherence, not previously investigated in male cancer patients, was considerably higher than reported for adjuvant breast cancer treatment. Subgroups of men suitable for intervention to increase adherence were identified. Paper IV, investigates the feasibility of improving an established method for screening large adverse drug reactions databases, the proportional reporting ratio (PRR), this by using restricted sub-databases according to treatment area (TA), introducing the concept of PRR-TA. -The PRR-TA method increases the signal-noise relationship of analyses; a finding highly relevant for possibly conserving manual resources in Pharmacovigilance work in a drug-authority setting.

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