Diseaseassociated
Disease-associated, often written as disease-associated, is an adjective used in medicine and genetics to describe factors that occur more frequently in people with a given disease than in those without it. Such factors can include genetic variants, genes, proteins, biomarkers, environmental exposures, or clinical traits. Associations are typically identified through epidemiological studies, case-control or cohort analyses, and genetic approaches such as genome-wide association studies and linkage analysis. Distinguishing association from causation is essential: a disease association signals a relationship, but does not by itself prove that the factor causes the disease.
Applications and examples: A disease-associated variant or gene is one linked to disease risk or differential
Databases and interpretation: Curated resources such as ClinVar, OMIM, and the GWAS Catalog annotate disease-associated variants