30-Second Takeaway
- A glaucoma PRS stratifies lifetime glaucoma risk and prognostic care needs beyond family history.
- Gene-silencing therapies (patisiran, vutrisiran, eplontersen) show greater efficacy for ATTRv-PN than several comparators.
Week ending June 13, 2026
Genetics in clinical practice: risk stratification, shifting genetic signals in neurodevelopment, biobank insights, disclosure effects, and ATTRv-PN therapeutics
Glaucoma polygenic risk score stratifies lifetime risk and need for escalated care
In 402,739 FinnGen participants, the best glaucoma PRS showed HR 3.32 for glaucoma comparing ≥90th versus 20–80th percentiles. Lifetime glaucoma risk by age 85 ranged from 2.5% (<1st percentile) to 45.3% (≥99th percentile). Highest PRS decile had greater 20-year cumulative rates of medication escalation (60.6% vs 38.4%), laser (39.8% vs 22.9%), and surgery (15.8% vs 9.5%). PRS effect was largely independent of family history and provided finer risk stratification by midlife. This is observational biobank evidence; prospective studies are needed before routine clinical deployment.
FinnGen biobank reveals enriched rare variants and genotype-phenotype links for neurodegeneration
FinnGen combines half a million genotyped participants with nationwide registries, enriching rare-variant discovery in a genetically isolated population. Analyses have identified thousands of genotype-phenotype associations, including novel protein‑altering variants relevant to AD and iNPH. The cohort overrepresents older and hospital-derived samples, increasing power for brain-disorder studies but limiting generalizability. Integration with recall, biomarker, and clinical data is highlighted as the pathway to accelerate translational application.
Mean polygenic risk for ASD and ADHD decreased in more recent diagnosis cohorts
In Danish iPSYCH data (17,071 ASD; 20,111 ADHD cases), later year of diagnosis associated with lower mean polygenic scores for ASD and ADHD. Effect sizes were modest (eg, β per 10-year increase ≈ -0.06 to -0.07 SDs across disorders) but consistent across multiple psychiatric PGSs. Findings align with diagnostic expansion or altered ascertainment as drivers of rising ASD/ADHD incidence rather than increased genetic burden. These observational trends do not identify specific environmental causes and should inform epidemiologic interpretation, not individual risk prediction.
References
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Additional Reads
Optional additional studies from this edition.