What resources exist worldwide that hold genetic data on people with ME/CFS?

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)
Are any forum members aware of any other databases of genetic information for people with ME/CFS (however defined) in existence other than;

UK Biobank
Lifelines
FinnGen
Mass General Brigham Biobank
Michigan Genomics Initiative Biobank
Estonian Biobank
Million Veteran Program

Thanks for any suggestions made.
 
There are commercial outfits. Depending on what you want, there might possibly be some utility in contacting them. Members here might have more information.
  • 23&Me (of course has new ownership now, issues with coverage and quality, self-reported diagnosis. Nancy Klimas has some data from people with ME/CFS.)
  • Invitae, Blueprint Genetics. There's an outside chance that some of their panels look at some variants of interest for ME/CFS. Some of the ME/CFS clinicians in the US might be sending their patients off to get genetic screening done.

These are the cohorts the Zhang study used - noting these for completeness.
We conducted whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on the same platform for N = 1,075 individuals (N = 464 ME/CFS patients, N = 611 negative controls) from three ME/CFS cohorts (Fig. 1A; Methods): (1) a Stanford cohort that we assembled (N = 208 cases, N = 534 controls; see methods), (2) a UK CureME cohort (N = 190 cases, N = 30 controls), and (3) a Cornell cohort (N = 66 cases, N = 47 controls).
 
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There's the dutch genetic data from Lifelines (not sure how accurate or whether yet accessible). I also recall the Austrians doing some genetic work but not sure how far they've gotten.

Apart from the commercial data Hutan mentioned there's also NIH Genomic data in the All of Us Research Program, but I don't know what that includes. I suppose it might also possible that some of the genetic studies on Long-Covid happening in countries where's there's more ME/CFS research (such as Germany) might also additionally include some ME/CFS data.
 
According to the ME pedia
"Nancy Klimas is part of the Institute for Neuroimmune Medicine's ME/CFS Gene Study" which aims to "create a one of a kind genetic database for ME/CFS

Not sure if this turned into something as it has a broken 2019 citation from Nova Southeastern University but under her page a genomic study is still mentioned.
 
Iceland and the Faroes have gene databases linked to some health records. Don’t know if that includes anything relevant to ME. The Icelandic one is large and run by a private company, the Faroese appears to be publicly funded but is rather small. Note the name of the Icelandic one
 
Liz Worthy at UAB had a SolveME funded project looking at WGS in ME/CFS

Here is her LinkedIn profile
 
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