New clues about why non-smokers, as well as smokers, develop chronic lung disease revealed

Lung-PR
25 Feb 2019 15:30:00.000

A group of researchers led by the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester has discovered genetic differences that put some people at higher risk than others of developing chronic lung disease. 

The new study, published in Nature Genetics, shows that genetic differences help explain why some people who have never smoked develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and why some smokers are at higher risk of getting the disease than other smokers. 

During the two-year study, researchers measured 20 million differences in the DNA in each of the 400,000 people who took part and compared them to measurements of lung function taken from breath tests. The results found 139 new genetic differences that influence lung health and COPD. These differences increase someone’s risk of developing COPD, in addition to smoking.

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More information is available from Professor Ian Hall, NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, University of Nottingham via email ian.hall@nottingham.ac.uk or Professor Louise Wain  louisewain@leicester.ac.uk and Professor Martin Tobin mt47@leicester.ac.uk
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Emma Rayner - Media Relations Manager

Email: emma.rayner@nottingham.ac.uk Phone: +44 (0)115 74 84413  Location: University Park

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