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Association between LRP5 polymorphism and bone mineral density: a Bayesian meta-analysis

Abstract

Background

The low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 5 gene (LRP5) was identified to be linked to the variation in BMD in high bone mass pedigrees. Subsequent population-based studies of the association between the LRP5 gene and BMD have yielded conflicting results. The present study was aimed at examining the association between LRP5 gene and BMD by using meta-analysis.

Methods

A systematic electronic search of literature was conducted to identify all published studies in English on the association between LRP5 gene and osteoporosis-related phenotypes, including bone mineral density and fracture. BMD data were summarized from individual studies by LRP5 genotype, and a synthesis of data was performed with random-effects meta-analyses. After excluding studies on animal and review papers, there were 19 studies for the synthesis. Among these studies, 10 studies used the rs3736228 (A1330V) polymorphism and reported BMD values.

Results

The 10 eligible studies comprised 16,705 individuals, with the majority being women (n = 8444), aged between 18 – 81 years. The overall distribution of genotype frequencies was: AA, 68%, AV and VV, 32%. However, the genotype frequency varied significantly within as well as between ethnic populations. On random-effects meta-analysis, lumbar spine BMD among individuals with the AA genotype was on average 0.018 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.012 to 0.023) g/cm2 higher than those with either AV or VV genotype. Similarly, femoral neck BMD among carriers of the AA genotype was 0.011 (95%CI: 0.004 to 0.017) g/cm2 higher than those without the genotype. While there was no significant heterogeneity in the association between the A1330V polymorphism and lumbar spine BMD (p = 0.55), the association was heterogeneous for femoral neck BMD (p = 0.05). The probability that the difference is greater than one standard deviation was 0.34 for femoral neck BMD and 0.54 for lumbar spine BMD.

Conclusion

These results suggest that there is a modest effect of the A1330V polymorphism on BMD in the general population, and that the modest association may limit its clinical use.

Peer Review reports

Background

Bone mineral density (BMD) is a primary predictor of osteoporotic fracture [1], and is used as a surrogate definition of osteoporosis [2]. Several epidemiological studies have consistently demonstrated that each standard deviation (SD) lowering in BMD is associated with an approximately 2-fold increase in fracture risk [3]. This strength of association is equivalent to or even stronger than the association between serum cholesterol and cardiovascular events [4], or between blood pressure measurements and risk of stroke mortality [5]. BMD changes with age, with peak levels been reached between the age of 20 and 30 and then decreasing during the later decades of life. Any BMD level -2.5 standard deviations or more below the young normal average level is classified as osteoporosis [6].

Extensive evidence from twin studies and family-based studies have suggested that between 60% and 82% variance of BMD is attributable to genetic factors [7, 8]. During the past two decades, it has become clear that many genes contribute to the variation in BMD in the general population; however, the localization of specific genes has not been always successful, due to on-going conflicting and contradictory findings [9].

A linkage analysis of a pedigree from a proband with the osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome (OPS), a disorder characterized by severely low bone mass and eye abnormality, identified a locus on chromosome 11 linked to variation in BMD in the pedigree [10]. The linkage between the region and BMD was reported independently from a genome-wide linkage analysis of an extended family with 22 members among whom 12 had very high bone mass [11]. In follow-up studies using the positional candidate approach both research groups found that the gene encoding the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5) was linked to both OPS and high bone mass [12–14]. Six novel mutations in LRP5 among 13 confirmed polymorphisms have also been associated with different conditions with increased BMD [15].

Since the identification of the LRP5 gene, several population-based association studies have examined the association between LRP5 polymorphisms and normal variation in BMD [14, 16–24]. However, these studies have yielded contradictory results, with some studies showing a significant association, while others did not. Thus, the role of LRP5 gene in the regulation of BMD in the general population has not been clear. In the presence of inconsistent findings, a systematic review by compiling all available data and synthesizing them into a coherent summary may provide a more reliable conclusion about the association between LRP5 polymorphisms and BMD. The present study was aimed at using the Bayesian approach to summarize the overall effect of LRP polymorphisms on BMD variation in different populations.

Methods

Literature search

A systematic search the literature was carried out by using electronic databases including Pubmed, Ovid (from 2001 to March 2008), and the Cochrane Controlled Trials Registered from 1960 to March 2004. The language was limited to English. The keywords used for this search were "LDL receptor-related protein 5 gene OR LRP5 gene" concatenated with "osteoporosis OR bone mineral density OR bone density OR BMD", and "fracture*". Two reviewers (BT and NN) identified eligible articles for which the abstracts were recorded. Then, if the abstract was consistent with the inclusion criteria, the full article text was obtained. The inclusion criteria were (a) original papers; (b) population-based association study with BMD being the outcome; and (c) adult men or women (aged 18+ years). The exclusion criteria were: (a) animal studies; (c) family studies; (c) review papers; and (d) studies on children or adolescents.

The full texts of all potentially relevant papers were obtained and three reviewers (BT, NN and TN) independently checked for data consistency. If more than one paper with the same data was identified, only the one that contained the original data were included. For studies in which BMD measurements were not presented as mean and SD for each genotype, we contacted the authors to request the data using a formatted collection form. For each study, relevant data including details of study design, study duration, gender, BMD measurements, LRP5 polymorphisms, inclusion and exclusion criteria, and incidence of fractures were extracted. As there have been very few studies on an association between LRP5 polymorphism and fracture [16], the primary outcome in this meta-analysis was BMD (Table 1).

Table 1 Characteristics of individual studies

Data synthesis and analysis

In each study, the outcome data (BMD) were extracted and summarized by genotype. The effect size for each study was the difference in BMD between genotypes (denoted d i ). The aim was to estimate an overall effect or weighted mean difference (WMD) in BMD between genotypes (denoted by d). This was done by both traditional (fixed-effects and random-effects models) meta-analysis [25], which have been described elsewhere [26] and fully Bayesian method [27, 28]. Briefly, each d i is assumed to be normally distributed with a "true" but unknown effect size θ i and a within-study variance σ i 2 MathType@MTEF@5@5@+=feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfKttLearuWrP9MDH5MBPbIqV92AaeXatLxBI9gBaebbnrfifHhDYfgasaacPC6xNi=xH8viVGI8Gi=hEeeu0xXdbba9frFj0xb9qqpG0dXdb9aspeI8k8fiI+fsY=rqGqVepae9pg0db9vqaiVgFr0xfr=xfr=xc9adbaqaaeGaciGaaiaabeqaaeqabiWaaaGcbaGaeq4Wdm3aa0baaSqaaiabdMgaPbqaaiabikdaYaaaaaa@3012@ . Furthermore, the collection of d i across studies is assumed to follow a normal distribution with unknown mean θ and variance τ 2. Thus, θ is the overall WMD in BMD between genotypes across studies and τ 2 is the between-study variance. The classical fixed-effects method of meta-analysis assumes that τ 2 = 0, whereas the classical random-effects method recognizes the possibility of heterogeneity of study-to-study variation (i.e., that τ 2 could be difference from 0). All parameters of the classical fixed and random-effects model were estimated by the inverse variance weighting method as implemented by the "meta" package within the R language [29].

In contrast to the traditional random-effects model where the parameters θ, σ 2 and τ 2 are assumed to be fixed, in Bayesian random-effects model, σ i 2 MathType@MTEF@5@5@+=feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfKttLearuWrP9MDH5MBPbIqV92AaeXatLxBI9gBaebbnrfifHhDYfgasaacPC6xNi=xH8viVGI8Gi=hEeeu0xXdbba9frFj0xb9qqpG0dXdb9aspeI8k8fiI+fsY=rqGqVepae9pg0db9vqaiVgFr0xfr=xfr=xc9adbaqaaeGaciGaaiaabeqaaeqabiWaaaGcbaGaeq4Wdm3aa0baaSqaaiabdMgaPbqaaiabikdaYaaaaaa@3012@ and τ 2 are assumed to be random variables. Furthermore, the Bayesian approach allows incorporate the existing data into the present analysis; therefore, the effect sizes of association between LRP5 variants and bone mineral density from a recent large-scale study were included in the analysis [30].

Fully Bayesian analysis refers to the use of external prior information, which must be specified for θ and τ 2 in the estimation of the overall effect size. In this analysis, the prior distribution for τ 2 was assumed to be uniformly distributed with parameters (0, 10) to recognize the uncertainty of effect sizes. The prior distribution for θ was given as a normal distribution of mean 0 and variance of 10000 to reflect the fact that the knowledge of effect sizes was vague. This is also considered a "referent prior", in the sense that it reflects the equal effect of genotypes in BMD variations. The estimation of model parameters was performed by the MCMC technique with the WinBUGS program [31].

The heterogeneity of effects across studies was assessed by computing the Cochran's Q statistic [32] and the coefficient of inconsistency (I 2), as described by Higgins et al [33]. Funnel plots were performed to identify any possible evidence of publication bias [34, 35]. Finally, recursive cumulative meta-analysis was also performed to examine whether the magnitude of effect changes markedly with sample size. In this analysis, each smaller size study was considered as an informative step, in which evidence was updated by larger sample size studies published in the interim.

Results

Characteristics of studies

The electronic search yielded 65 papers on the association between LRP5 and osteoporosis-related phenotypes; however, only 19 met the inclusion criteria (Figure 1). Among the 22 SNPs used in various studies, the following 10 SNPs were more common (in order of the frequency of studies): rs3736228, rs4988321, rs41494349, rs2277268, rs2306862, rs556442, rs17149104, rs11574422, rs545382, rs4988319. Fourteen studies examined the association between the SNP rs3736228 (A1330V polymorphism, alanine-to-valine substitution at position 1330 in exon 18) within the LRP5 gene and BMD or fracture in human. Among the 14 studies, 8 papers reported actual BMD data by genotype. Corresponding authors of the 6 remaining papers were contacted with a data collection form, however, only 2 responded. The three studies that were not included in this analysis found no significant association between the SNP rs3736228 (referred as SNP A1330V in the article) and BMD. Eventually, data from 10 studies [18, 20, 21, 23, 24, 36–40] were included in the traditional analysis of association with BMD. In a recent large-scale analysis of the association between LRP5 polymorphisms and BMD or fracture in Caucasian individuals, the results were only shown effect sizes of the association [30]; therefore, this study was only able to be incorporated in the Bayesian approach.

Figure 1
figure 1

Summary of search strategy and result.

Five studies were conducted on Asian populations (i.e., Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) [18, 21, 23, 24, 37, 38], with a total sample size of 3131 individuals and 6 studies were on Caucasian populations with 13,574 individuals [20, 21, 24, 36, 39, 40]. Approximately 80% of participants were women. The average age of all participants was 60 years (range: 18 to 81 years).

Distribution of LRP5 genotypes

There was high variability in the genotypic distribution within and between populations. For example, within the Asian populations, the relative frequency of the A1330V AA genotype ranged between 46% in Japanese women [18] to 68% in Chinese women [38] and 64% in Caucasian women [24]. However, in a study among Korean men, the frequency of AA genotype was 74% [23]. In Caucasian populations, the A1330V AA genotype was found in 56% of Dutch men [39], which was significantly lower than that in Finnish men 91% [40] (Table 2). The frequency of AA genotype in Swedish men was around 76% [21].

Table 2 Summary of BMD data by A1330V genotype

Women of Caucasian background appeared to have significantly higher relative frequency of the AA genotype than their Asian counterparts (70% vs. 55%) [18, 20, 24, 37–39]; however, the observation was not found in men (75% vs. 70%).

Association between LRP5 genotypes and BMD

As genotype VV was low in most populations (i.e., approximately 3.4%), data from the VV and AV genotypes were combined into one group which was then compared to the AA genotype. This approach of combination was also utilized in most primary studies.

Pooled effect size

Classical meta-analysis

In classical random-effects model, femoral neck BMD in individuals with genotype AA was significantly higher than in those with the AV and VV genotypes combined (WMD: 0.011, 95% CI: 0.004 to 0.017 g/cm2) (Table 3). Lumbar spine BMD in individuals homozygous for allele A was on average 0.018 g/cm2 (95% CI: 0.012 to 0.023 g/cm2) higher than that in individuals with allele V (AV and VV genotypes combined) (Figure 2 and 3). For both sites, fixed-effects and random-effects analyses were almost identical.

Table 3 Sub-group analysis by sex and ethnicity (random-effects model)
Figure 2
figure 2

Weighted mean difference and 95% confidence interval in femoral neck BMD between AA and AV/VV genotypes. The size of plots was proportional to their sample size. Each study was shown difference of BMD in men (M) and women (W) using random effects model. The diamond showed the overall effect of the association. Reduced BMD was shown in group of AV/VV genotype compared to AA genotype when the diamond was set toward the right of the vertical line.

Figure 3
figure 3

Weighted mean difference and 95% confidence interval in lumbar spine BMD between AA and AV/VV genotypes. Explanations were presented in figure 2.

The cumulative meta-analysis showed that after a cumulative sample size of 15,285 individuals for femoral neck and 16,705 for lumbar spine, the association between A1330V variant and BMD became statistically apparent (Figure 4).

Figure 4
figure 4

Cumulative meta-analysis (by sample size) for femoral neck (left panel) and lumbar spine BMD (right panel). In each additional study, the mean difference (95% CI) of BMD difference between AA and AV/VV genotypes were computed accumulatively.

Bayesian meta-analysis

In Bayesian analysis, we analyzed two models separately: model I and model II. Model I included the data used for the "classical" analysis and in model II, we incorporated the data used for the "classical" analysis with recently published data [30]. The difference in results of two models was modest (data not shown); therefore, the results of model II were presented. Parameters obtained from Bayesian meta-analysis were used to estimate posterior distributions of mean difference in BMD between AA and AV/VV genotypes (Figure 5a and 5b). The area under the curve between any two points on the distribution is an estimate of the probability of effect size. For example, shaded areas in figures 5a and 5b represent for the probability that the effect size (AA vs. AV/VV) of >0.1 SD of FNBMD and LSBMD by using random-effects model, respectively (each SD was 0.12 g/cm2for FNBMD and 0.17 g/cm2 for LSBMD). These areas accounted for ~34% of the whole area under the curve for femoral neck BMD and ~54% for lumbar spine BMD. In other words, the probability that the effect size (AA vs. AV/VV) of >0.1 SD was ~34% for FNBMD and ~54% for LSBMD. There was a 100% chance that the effect size was less than 0.25 SD. In other words, the probability for a possible difference in BMD between genotypes at both the femoral neck and lumbar spine was highly likely lower than 0.25 SD.

Figure 5
figure 5

Posterior distribution of weighted mean difference (WMD) in BMD at the femoral neck (A) and lumbar spine (B). For example, shaded areas in the figures represent for the probability that the effect size (AA vs. AV/VV) of >0.1 SD of FNBMD and LSBMD by using random-effects model, respectively. These areas accounted for ~34% of the whole area under the curve for femoral neck BMD and ~54% for lumbar spine BMD. In other words, the probability that the effect size (AA vs. AV/VV) of >0.1 SD was ~34% for FNBMD and ~54% for LSBMD. Results from fixed-effects and random-effects analysis were almost identical for LSBMD. FNBMD, femoral neck bone mineral density; LSBMD; lumbar spine bone mineral density; 1 SD was 0.12 g/cm2 for BMD at the femoral neck and 0.17 g/cm2 at the lumbar spine.

Subgroup analysis

In subgroup analyses, the effect of A1330V variant on BMD was found to be present in Asian populations at the lumbar spine (WMD between AA and AV/VV: 0.014; 95% CI: 0.002 to 0.027 g/cm2) and in Caucasian populations at either the lumbar spine (WMD: 0.018; 95% CI: 0.012 to 0.025 g/cm2) or at femoral neck (WMD: 0.011, 95% CI: 0.003 to 0.019 g/cm2) (Table 3). Analysis by sex revealed that the association between the A1330V variant and BMD was significant in both genders, with WMD for women being 0.02 (95% CI: 0.013 to 0.028 g/cm2) for lumbar spine and 0.011 (95% CI: 0.001 to 0.021 g/cm2) for femoral neck (Table 3). In men, WMD in BMD between AA and AV/VV were 0.014 (95% CI: 0.003 to 0.025 g/cm2) for lumbar spine and 0.011 (95% CI: 0.0004 to 0.022 g/cm2) for femoral neck (Table 3).

Assessment of heterogeneity and publication bias

There was no evidence of heterogeneity in lumbar spine BMD (I2 = 0, p = 0.55). However, the effects of the A1330V variant on femoral neck BMD were significantly different among studies, with the coefficient of inconsistency being 46.8% (p = 0.05) (Table 3).

In the funnel plot (Figure 6), there was symmetry in lumbar spine BMD (p = 0.65), suggesting no significant publication bias. However, the asymmetric feature in femoral neck BMD showed a trend of publication bias (p = 0.02). Nevertheless, when the analysis was limited to women only, there was no evidence of publication bias in either lumbar spine (p = 0.35) and femoral neck BMD (p = 0.17).

Figure 6
figure 6

Funnel plot of weighted mean difference for femoral neck BMD (p = 0.02) and for lumbar spine BMD (p = 0.65) versus inverse standard error Studies with higher effect size tended to have larger standard error. (1 SD was estimated of 0.12 g/cm2 and 0.15 g/cm2 for femoral neck and lumbar spine, respectively).

Discussion

The discovery of linkage between the LRP5 gene and high bone mass was considered a genuine progress in the genetics of osteoporosis, a disorder that has been known to have a substantial genetic component. However, since linkage can only demonstrate a correlated transmission of alleles within pedigrees, the relative contribution of the LRP5 gene to BMD in population has to be assessed in association studies. Several association studies have tested the association between the LRP5 gene and BMD, but the results were inconsistent, with different polymorphisms being used and different study designs and sample sizes. In the present meta-analysis, by systematically combining all previous studies, there was a significant association between the A1330V polymorphism and lumbar spine BMD in both Asian and Caucasian populations. However, that variation at the A1330V polymorphism explained about 0.2 to 0.5% of between-subjects variation in BMD, which suggested that the effect of this LRP5 gene polymorphism on BMD was modest.

The present meta-analysis also suggests that the magnitude of effect of the A1330V on BMD was similar in both men and women, which was consistent with previous observations (Table 3) [17, 39]. Similarly, the statistically significant association between A1330V and BMD at both sites was observed in Caucasian populations, but the association only found in Asian populations, which was likely due to the large sample size of the former populations.

It is interesting to observe that although the genotypic distribution was consistent with the Hardy-Weinberg's equilibrium law in most studies, the relative distribution of the A1330V genotypes varied remarkably between – as well as within-populations. For example, the AA genotype was 68% in Chinese women [38], 46% in Japanese women [18], or 73% of in Dutch women [39]. Among Caucasian populations, the AA genotype was detected in 56% in Dutch men [39] vs. 91% in Finnish men [40], and 76% in Danish men [36]. It is not clear why there was such a major difference in the genotypic distributions; however, population stratification and/or mixed ethnicities could be the underlying responsible factors. Gender and ethnicity may both interact to the influence of LRP5 polymorphism in association to BMD [41].

These analyses suggested that the clinical use of this gene variant was may be limited due to its modest effect size on BMD. The average difference in BMD between those homozygous for allele A and those with V allele was approximately 0.1 SD. Each SD lower BMD was associated with an approximately two-fold in fracture risk [1]. Therefore, it seems that the AA genotype within the A1330V polymorphism confers minimal protection against fracture via increased BMD. However, it is possible that the variant can have positive effect on fracture independent of BMD, and its use in conjunction with BMD and other clinical factors may identify a subset of high-risk individuals of fracture.

The magnitude of association between LRP5 polymorphism and BMD in this study was lower than that of between Collagen I alpha 1 gene (COLIA1) and BMD. In a previous meta-analysis, the difference between two homozygous genotypes of the COLIA1 gene was approximately 1 SD for femoral neck BMD (0.19 g/cm2, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.31), but not for lumbar spine BMD (0.09 g/cm2, 95% CI -0.03 to 0.21) [42]. On the other hand, a number of meta-analyses on the association between the vitamin D receptor gene (VDR) and BMD revealed an effect size of less than 0.1 SD [43, 44].

A recent genome-wide association study between LRP5 polymorphisms and BMD or fracture in a large scale [45] found the A1330V polymorphism was associated with BMD at the lumbar spine and femoral neck, in which the risk allele V was associated with a 0.13 SD decrease in BMD, and accounted for 0.6% and 0.2% of the variation in lumbar spine and femoral neck BMD, respectively. Taken together, these results suggest that although there was a "true" association between the A1330V polymorphism and BMD, the effect is likely to be modest because the gene variant explained less than 1% of the variation in BMD.

The modest effect of the LRP5 gene on BMD is consistent with the view that the disorder is affected by several genes, each with small effect size [46]. Indeed, more than 50 genes have been proposed or identified to be associated with either BMD or fracture risk [47, 48]; however, apart from the COLIA1, none of those genes have been conclusively demonstrated to have major effect on any osteoporosis-related phenotypes. The present meta-analysis suggested that the identification of specific genes that truly affect BMD can be a daunting task, because of a reliable result (i.e., low false positive rate), a typical association study requires at least 6600 individuals.

It is possible that the main effect of the LRP5 gene on BMD is modest, but it is also equally possible that the gene may confer a greater effect when it interacts with an environmental exposure or with other genes. However, these possibilities of gene-environment or gene-gene interactions have not been systematically explored in the field of osteoporosis. As a result, the present analysis can not address the issue of gene-environment or gene-gene interactions.

Although the present analysis supported an association between the LRP5 gene and BMD, the result must be considered in terms of a number of strengths and caveats. One strength of meta-analysis is that it increases the power for defining a fine association that is not usually possible in small individual studies. Nevertheless, given the weak association observed here, the possibility of false positive finding (or, for that matter, false negative finding) can not be ruled out, particularly in relation to the association found in men. Moreover, as with any meta-analysis, exclusion of pertinent unpublished studies is always a "threat" to the validity of the analysis.

The use of the Bayesian approach in this analysis deserves a mention. Tradition meta-analysis can estimate an effect size, but it is not possible to make a probabilistic statement about the effect size. In contrast, by treating the effect size as a random variable, Bayesian analysis can make inference on various probable effect sizes. Indeed, by combining a prior distribution with observed data from primary studies within the Bayesian theorem it is possible to make such an inference [47–49]. Thus, the Bayesian approach allows us to directly address the clinical question of "given the observed data, what is the probability of the 'true' difference in BMD between genotypes". This is different from the classical statistical approach in which the interpretation is entirely dependent on the p-value. The p-value is the probability that the test statistic is "significant" given that there is no difference in BMD between genotypes. This p-value based inference has been charged as counter-intuitive and even "false reasoning" [50]. In other words, classical statistical inference is concerned with the probabilistic behavior of a test statistic, whereas Bayesian inference is concerned with the research question. Moreover, In Bayesian analysis, one is not limited to consider the present data, but must take into account any data that have been previously been known. By using the Bayesian approach, we have shown that the difference in BMD between AA and AV/VV genotypes is less than 0.25 SD; there was virtually no chance that the effect size is greater than 0.25 SD.

In this analysis, there is no evidence of publication bias for the association between lumbar BMD and LRP5 gene. Although the best attempt has been made to search all relevant published studies, it is impossible to know how many "negative studies" are unpublished. Of the 14 eligible studies, it was only possible to retrieve analyzable data from 10 studies despite many efforts. The remaining 4 studies reported a non-significant association between the A1330V polymorphism and BMD [17, 19, 41, 51]. Therefore, it could be argued that results of the present study may overestimate the true effect of LRP5 gene on BMD.

It should be noted that the present analysis was limited to a single SNP (rs3736228) within the LRP5 gene. Although this SNP has been used in most studies, other SNPs have also been shown to be associated with BMD. In recent years, the analysis of genetic association has shifted from the single SNP-based analysis to a more reductionistic approach such as SNP-based haplotypes. Some studies found no association between the LRP5 gene and BMD when analyzing each SNP as a separate variable, but were able to detect an association when the analysis was based on the use of SNP-based haplotypes [17, 41]. The present meta-analysis did not consider the haplotype association; therefore, the estimate does not reflect any more complex association between the LRP5 gene and BMD. However, haplotype analyses reported in primary studies also showed that the magnitude of association between the gene and BMD is modest, with variation among haplotypes accounting for between 0.5 and 1.2% of the variation in BMD [22, 52, 53].

Thus, irrespective of the haplotype or single SNP-based analysis, results of this meta-analysis indicated that the A1330V variant within the LRP5 gene is modestly associated with bone mineral density, and that the modest effect size may limit its use in clinical setting.

Abbreviations

All:

abbreviations are defined in the text.

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Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge and thank to Dr Daniel L Koller, Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA and Drs Koh-ichiro Yoshiura and Takeshi Mizuguchi Department of Human Genetics, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Japan for their providing summary data which form parts of the present analysis.

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Correspondence to Tuan V Nguyen.

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Competing interests

Dr John Eisman serves as a consultant and receives corporate appointment from Amgen, deCode, Eli Lilly and Company, GE-Lunar, Merck Sharp & Dohme Ltd., Novartis, Organon, Roche-GSK, sanofi-aventis and Servier. All other authors have neither financial nor non-financial competing interests that may be affected from the publication of the manuscript.

The first author is a recipient of the Harvey Carey Memorial Scholarship of the University of New South Wales for the postgraduate candidate. The second author is a recipient of a postdoctoral fellowship from the AMBeR (Australian Medical Bioinformatics Resource).

Authors' contributions

BNHT and NDN obtained and analysed data. The manuscript was initially drafted by BNHT and revised by TVN and NDN. TVN, NDN and JAE were involved in the study design, data analysis, and in the conceptual discussion of the project. All authors contributed to the last version of the manuscript.

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Tran, B.N., Nguyen, N.D., Eisman, J.A. et al. Association between LRP5 polymorphism and bone mineral density: a Bayesian meta-analysis. BMC Med Genet 9, 55 (2008). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2350-9-55

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