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GWAS Meta-analysis Identifies Novel Associated Loci and Points to Causal Tissues in Central Serous Chorioretinopathy

Chen, L.; Kim, S. H.; Truong, B.; Rämö, J. T.; Gorman, B. R.; van Dijk, E. H. C.; Brinks, J.; Nikopensius, T.; Choi, S. H.; Kajanne, R.; Mehtonen, J.; Kaarniranta, K.; Sobrin, L.; Kurki, M.; Yzer, S.; VA Million Veteran Program, ; FinnGen, ; Wu, W.-C.; Turunen, J. A.; Segre, A. J.; Mercader, J. M.; Huerta, A.; Daly, M. J.; Palotie, A.; Ellinor, P. T.; Boon, C. J.; Iyengar, S. K.; Peachey, N. S.; Natarajan, P.; Rossin, E. J.

2026-05-22 ophthalmology
10.64898/2026.05.20.26353693 medRxiv
Show abstract

Objective: To define CSC genetic architecture and identify implicated ocular tissues, cell types, genes, and circulating proteins. Data Sources: Genome-wide data were assembled from FinnGen, All of Us, Mass General Brigham Biobank, Million Veteran Program, and a Dutch chronic CSC cohort. Serum protein quantitative trait loci, human single-cell ocular atlases, and UK Biobank macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging were used for downstream analyses. Study Selection: Five European-ancestry cohorts with genome-wide data and cohort-specific CSC case-control definitions were included, comprising 2,584 cases and 1,044,455 controls. Variants present in at least 2 cohorts were meta-analyzed. Data Extraction and Synthesis: Cohort-level GWASs were adjusted for age, age squared, sex, genotyping array or batch, and 10 genetic principal components, then combined using fixed-effects inverse-variance meta-analysis. Post-GWAS analyses included gene prioritization, colocalization, Mendelian randomization, single-cell disease-relevance scoring, and testing of a CSC genetic risk score in UK Biobank OCT images. Main Outcome(s) and Measure(s): Genome-wide significant CSC loci, effector genes and proteins, tissue and cell-type enrichment, and CSC-relevant OCT abnormalities. Results: Across 11,068,938 variants, 10 loci reached genome-wide significance (P < 5e-8), including 3 novel loci near TGFB1, LINC00551, and LOC105375630 and 7 replicated loci near CFH, CD46, NOTCH4, PREX1, PTPRB, GATA5, and TNFRSF10A. Integrative analyses prioritized 10 candidate effector genes. Colocalization and Mendelian randomization implicated circulating TNFRSF10A, TGFB1, and CASP10 levels. Single-cell analyses localized genetic risk to sclera (P = 2.0e-4) and vascular endothelial cells (P = 4.0e-4), with fibroblast enrichment. In UK Biobank, OCT abnormalities were more frequent in the top vs bottom 1% of CSC genetic risk (18 of 109 [16.5%] vs 8 of 134 [6.0%]; odds ratio, 4.05; 95% CI, 1.65-10.87; P = .002). Conclusions and Relevance: In this GWAS meta-analysis, CSC susceptibility localized predominantly to scleral and vascular biology rather than primary retinal pigment epithelial dysfunction. These findings support CSC as a sclerovascular disorder and nominate complement regulation, endothelial signaling, and extracellular matrix pathways for future study.

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