Sex-Dependent Aggregation of Tinnitus in Swedish Families Trpchevska, Natalia López Escámez, José Antonio Tinnitus Familial aggregation Genetic risk Hearing loss Bilateral Unilateral Constant Twin and adoption studies point towards a genetic contribution to tinnitus; however, how the genetic risk applies to di erent forms of tinnitus is poorly understood. Here, we perform a familial aggregation study and determine the relative recurrence risk for tinnitus in siblings ( s). Four di erent Swedish studies (N = 186,598) were used to estimate the prevalence of self-reported bilateral, unilateral, constant, and severe tinnitus in the general population and we defined whether these 4 di erent forms of tinnitus segregate in families from the Swedish Tinnitus Outreach Project (STOP, N = 2305). We implemented a percentile bootstrap approach to provide accurate estimates and confidence intervals for s. We reveal a significant s for all types of tinnitus, the highest found being 7.27 (95% CI (5.56–9.07)) for severe tinnitus, with a higher susceptibility in women (10.25; 95% CI (7.14–13.61)) than in men (5.03; 95% CI (3.22–7.01)), suggesting that severity may be the most genetically influenced trait in tinnitus in a sex-dependent manner. Our findings strongly support the notion that genetic factors impact on the development of tinnitus, more so for severe tinnitus. These findings highlight the importance of considering tinnitus severity and sex in the design of large genetic studies to optimize diagnostic approaches and ultimately improve therapeutic interventions. 2021-02-09T11:17:22Z 2021-02-09T11:17:22Z 2020-11-25 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Trpchevska, N., Bulla, J., Prada Hellberg, M., Edvall, N. K., Lazar, A., Mehraei, G., ... & Cederroth, C. R. (2020). Sex-Dependent Aggregation of Tinnitus in Swedish Families. Journal of clinical medicine, 9(12), 3812. [doi:10.3390/jcm9123812] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/66405 10.3390/jcm9123812 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Atribución 3.0 España Mdpi