TY - JOUR
T1 - Genes and functional GI disorders
T2 - From casual to causal relationship
AU - D'Amato, Mauro
PY - 2013/8/1
Y1 - 2013/8/1
N2 - Background: The functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID), and in particular irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), pose a considerable burden on health care and society, and negatively impact quality of life. These are common conditions of unknown etiology, and symptom-based criteria are currently the sole nosological tools for their clinical classification. Major insight into FGID pathophysiology is therefore needed and, in recent years, increasing hope has been put on genetic research for the identification of causative pathways. This is more advanced in IBS compared with other FGID, but it has still provided often indecipherable results and no unequivocal evidence of a pathogenetic role for any particular gene. Although thousands of genetic variants have been undoubtedly linked to human disease in hundreds of genome-wide association studies (GWAS), no similar effort has yet even been attempted in FGID. If meaningful, robust, and reproducible results are to be obtained for IBS and other FGID, we must shift gear and adopt these powerful hypothesis-free approaches through concerted actions and allocation of adequate resources. Provided these are in place, the major challenge will be, inevitably, the choice of the target phenotype(s) beyond a descriptive symptom-based classification. Purpose: In view of these much awaited developments, salient results and difficulties inherent to IBS gene discovery are briefly summarized here.
AB - Background: The functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID), and in particular irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), pose a considerable burden on health care and society, and negatively impact quality of life. These are common conditions of unknown etiology, and symptom-based criteria are currently the sole nosological tools for their clinical classification. Major insight into FGID pathophysiology is therefore needed and, in recent years, increasing hope has been put on genetic research for the identification of causative pathways. This is more advanced in IBS compared with other FGID, but it has still provided often indecipherable results and no unequivocal evidence of a pathogenetic role for any particular gene. Although thousands of genetic variants have been undoubtedly linked to human disease in hundreds of genome-wide association studies (GWAS), no similar effort has yet even been attempted in FGID. If meaningful, robust, and reproducible results are to be obtained for IBS and other FGID, we must shift gear and adopt these powerful hypothesis-free approaches through concerted actions and allocation of adequate resources. Provided these are in place, the major challenge will be, inevitably, the choice of the target phenotype(s) beyond a descriptive symptom-based classification. Purpose: In view of these much awaited developments, salient results and difficulties inherent to IBS gene discovery are briefly summarized here.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84880122146&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nmo.12173
DO - 10.1111/nmo.12173
M3 - Review Article
C2 - 23826979
AN - SCOPUS:84880122146
SN - 1350-1925
VL - 25
SP - 638
EP - 649
JO - Neurogastroenterology & Motility
JF - Neurogastroenterology & Motility
IS - 8
ER -