Association Analysis of Nuclear Receptor Rev-erb Alpha Gene (NR1D1) and Japanese Methamphetamine Dependence
2011

Association of Rev-erb Alpha Gene with Methamphetamine Dependence in Japan

Sample size: 447 publication Evidence: low

Author Information

Author(s): Kishi Taro, Kitajima Tsuyoshi, Kawashima Kunihiro, Okochi Tomo, Yamanouchi Yoshio, Kinoshita Yoko, Ujike Hiroshi, Inada Toshiya, Yamada Mitsuhiko, Uchimura Naohisa, Sora Ichiro, Iyo Masaomi, Ozaki Norio, Iwata Nakao

Primary Institution: Fujita Health University School of Medicine

Hypothesis

Is there an association between the NR1D1 gene and methamphetamine dependence in the Japanese population?

Conclusion

The study found no significant association between the NR1D1 gene and methamphetamine dependence in the Japanese population.

Supporting Evidence

  • The study involved 215 patients with methamphetamine dependence and 232 controls.
  • Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects.
  • The study was approved by ethics committees at multiple institutions.
  • Genotype frequencies were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
  • Power analysis indicated more than 80% power for detecting associations.

Takeaway

The researchers looked at a gene to see if it was linked to methamphetamine addiction in Japan, but they didn't find any connection.

Methodology

A case-control study was conducted with 215 methamphetamine dependence patients and 232 healthy controls, analyzing three tagging SNPs.

Potential Biases

Potential statistical error due to small sample size.

Limitations

The sample size was small, and the study did not include a mutation scan for rare variants.

Participant Demographics

215 methamphetamine dependence patients (175 males, 40 females; mean age 36.3 years) and 232 healthy controls (187 males, 45 females; mean age 36.4 years), all ethnically Japanese.

Statistical Information

Statistical Significance

p>0.05

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.2174/157015911795017065

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