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R.S. Houlston, D. Ford, Genetics of coeliac disease, QJM: An International Journal of Medicine, Volume 89, Issue 10, October 1996, Pages 737–744, https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/89.10.737
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Summary
Coeliac disease is one of the most common gastrointestinal disorders. The clinical features of the disease are protean, possibly due to heterogeneity. A familial basis for coeliac disease is well recognized, and although a strong HLA association is seen, this cannot entirely account for the increased risk seen in relatives of affected cases. A gene (or genes) at an HLA-unlinked locus also participates in causing coeliac disease and is likely to be a stronger determinant of disease susceptibility than the HLA locus. Such a gene (or genes) could theoretically act either additively or multiplicatively in conjunction with HLA. However, the familial risks seen in siblings and monozygotic twins are most parsimonious with a multiplicative model. Without evidence for a particular HLA-unlinked gene, and because no genetic model can be reliably ascribed to the non-HLA linked locus, identifying causative non-linked HLA genes is likely to be through a genome-wide linkage search using non-parametric methods.