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Lipoedema is a chronic adipose tissue disorder mainly affecting women with excess subcutaneous fat deposition on the lower limbs, associated with pain and tenderness. There is often a family history of lipoedema, suggesting a genetic origin, but the contribution of genetics is not well studied. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for this disorder in a clinically ascertained cohort from Spain and performed a meta-analysis with the UK lipoedema cohort GWAS. We then used the results of this study as a replication of the inferred UK Biobank “lipoedema phenotype” study. Whilst our meta-analysis alone did not identify any genome-wide significant associations, our clinical cohorts provide support for three loci identified through the UKBB study: the chr2q24.3 GRB14-COBLL1 locus (rs6753142, PMETA=1.64x10-6), chr6p21.1 VEGFA locus (rs4711750, PMETA=8.99x10-7) and the chr5q11.2 ANKRD55-MAP3K1 locus (rs3936510, PMETA=1.67x10-5). We identify numerous rare SNPs with strong association signals in our meta-analysis (P<1x10-6) with support in both UK and Spanish datasets, three of which also show nominal support in the UKBB (P<0.05). These findings provide a starting point towards understanding the genetic basis of clinical lipoedema and demonstrate the utility of the interplay of large-scale biobanks genetic data and clinically ascertained cohorts to elucidate the genetic architecture of lipoedema.
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