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Major gene segregation of actinic prurigo among North American Indians in Saskatchewan

✍ Scribed by Schnell, Audrey H.; Elston, Robert C.; Hull, Peter R.; Lane, Peter R.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
45 KB
Volume
92
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


Actinic prurigo is an idiopathic, familial photodermatosis seen especially in American Indians. Segregation analysis was performed on 12 Saskatchewan pedigrees with American Indian ancestry, comprising a total of 1,148 individuals, ascertained via probands diagnosed with actinic prurigo. Although a high degree of familial aggregation has been noted in the past and dominant inheritance has been suggested, no formal segregation analysis has been attempted. Actinic prurigo has a variable age of onset and, therefore, age at the time of censoring must be taken into account in the analysis. However, as these ages of 57% of the unaffected individuals were missing, an algorithm was devised to impute the missing ages from known birth years in the family based on the age differences among relatives and spouses. Using these imputed ages, simple dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance and a single age of onset distribution was found. The method for imputing the ages at examination was evaluated, as was the correction for ascertainment, by using alternative methods and comparing the results. Regardless of the method used, a dominant mode of inheritance without any multifactorial component remained the best hypothesis.