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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

expression
in
affected
individuals.
Disease-associated
biomarkers
may
aid
diagnosis
or
prognosis.
Examples
include
BRCA1
and
BRCA2
variants
linked
to
breast
and
ovarian
cancer
risk;
HLA
alleles
associated
with
autoimmune
diseases;
the
APOE
ε4
allele
associated
with
higher
Alzheimer’s
disease
risk;
and
APOL1
variants
linked
to
kidney
disease
in
people
of
African
ancestry.
Many
associations
are
context-specific,
with
effect
sizes
varying
by
population
and
often
part
of
a
polygenic
or
multifactorial
basis.
and
genes.
Interpretations
weigh
effect
size,
replication
across
studies,
population
background,
and
biological
plausibility.
Limitations
include
confounding,
population
stratification,
multiple
testing,
and
the
possibility
that
an
association
reflects
linkage
rather
than
direct
causality.