A Systematic Review on the Genetic Contribution to Tinnitus
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Tinnitus Heritability Genetics
Fecha
2024-02-09Referencia bibliográfica
Perez-Carpena, P., Lopez-Escamez, J.A. & Gallego-Martinez, Á. A Systematic Review on the Genetic Contribution to Tinnitus. JARO 25, 13–33 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10162-024-00925-6
Patrocinador
Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions PP-C is funded by the Andalusian Health Government (Grant RH-0150–2020).; GNP-182 GENDER-Net Co-Plus Fund; “La Caixa” Foundation (ID 100010434), under agreement LCF/PR/DE18/52010002; European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, Grant Agreement No. 848261; The University of Sydney to support research on genetics of Meniere disease (K7013_B3413 Grant); Andalusian Health Government (Grant DOC_01677)Resumen
Purpose To assess the available evidence to support a genetic contribution and define the role of common and rare variants
in tinnitus.
Methods After a systematic search and quality assessment, 31 records including 383,063 patients were selected (14 epidemiological
studies and 17 genetic association studies). General information on the sample size, age, sex, tinnitus prevalence,
severe tinnitus distribution, and sensorineural hearing loss was retrieved. Studies that did not include data on hearing assessment
were excluded. Relative frequencies were used for qualitative variables to compare different studies and to obtain average
values. Genetic variants and genes were listed and clustered according to their potential role in tinnitus development.
Results The average prevalence of tinnitus estimated from population-based studies was 26.3% for any tinnitus, and 20%
of patients with tinnitus reported it as an annoying symptom. One study has reported population-specific differences in the
prevalence of tinnitus, the white ancestry being the population with a higher prevalence. Genome-wide association studies
have identified and replicated two common variants in the Chinese population (rs2846071; rs4149577) in the intron of
TNFRSF1A, associated with noise-induced tinnitus. Moreover, gene burden analyses in sequencing data from Spanish and
Swede patients with severe tinnitus have identified and replicated ANK2, AKAP9, and TSC2 genes.
Conclusions The genetic contribution to tinnitus is starting to be revealed and it shows population-specific effects in European
and Asian populations. The common allelic variants associated with tinnitus that showed replication are associated
with noise-induced tinnitus. Although severe tinnitus has been associated with rare variants with large effect, their role on
hearing or hyperacusis has not been established.