4.1 Review

Genetics of alcoholic and nonalcoholic pancreatitis

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN GASTROENTEROLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 501-506

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MOG.0b013e328356e7f3

Keywords

CFTR; pancreatic lipase; pancreatitis; PRSS1; SPINK1

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK061451, DK054709]
  2. Frieda G. and Saul F. Shapira BRA Cancer Research Program
  3. Wayne Fusaro Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund

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Purpose of review To provide an expert review and expert perspective on important advances related to the genetics of acute and chronic pancreatitis. Recent findings Provocative new studies highlight the interplay between genetic, developmental, and environmental factors. Key findings include the relationship between pancreas divisum and CFTR mutations, the role of trypsin in acute and recurrent acute pancreatitis, and the discovery of a pancreatitis modifier gene on the X chromosome that provides new clues to why the vast majority of patients with alcoholic pancreatitis are men. Summary Pancreatic genetics is complex, linked to the multiplicative and modifying effects of multiple interacting genetic, structural, and environmental factors. Clinical interpretation will require disease modeling and simulation to understand the combined effect of risk factors that alone are neither sufficient nor necessary to cause disease, and to design treatment strategies that prevent the development of advanced chronic pancreatitis - which by definition is irreversible.

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