rs9829896 protective_against drug dependence
Evidence from:
primary |
all sources
Evidence (8 sources)
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
The rs9829896-C allele was associated with reduced risk of drug abuse: odds ratio (OR)=0.68
confidence: 0.95
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
rs9829896-C allele was significantly and consistently associated with reduced risk of abuse for all drug categories in the meta-analysis of UHS and GAIN AAs
confidence: 0.95
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
protective rs9829896-C allele ... would decrease susceptibility to abusing drugs
confidence: 0.90
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
drug abuse protective rs9829896-C allele was associated with higher OPRM1 expression
confidence: 0.90
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
protective allele for drug abuse, rs9829896-C
confidence: 0.98
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
the rs9829896-C allele being associated with reduced risk of drug abuse
confidence: 0.75
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
the rs9829896-C allele was associated with reduced risk of drug abuse
confidence: 0.96
KAT2B polymorphism identified for drug abuse in African Americans with regulatory links to drug abuse pathways in human prefrontal cortex.
(2016)
PMID:26202629
primary
its C allele was associated with reduced risk of drug abuse, showing consistent ORs (0.68 and 0.53) across the AA cohorts
confidence: 0.95