Celiac.com 07/01/2021 - We get a lot of questions from celiac community members wondering about various aspects of celiac disease. One question we see a lot is about how genetic makeup influences the odds of developing celiac disease. Specifically, what are the odds of developing celiac disease based on HLA-DQA/DQB genotypes? Here's a breakdown of the odds by genotype combination.
The odds of developing celiac disease based on HLA-DQA/DQB genotypes is as follows:
DQ2+DQ8 |
1:7 (14.3%) |
DQ2+DQ2 OR DQ2 Homozygous DQB1*02 |
1:10 (10%) |
DQ8+DQ8 |
1:12 (8.42%) |
DQ8+DQ8*02 |
1:24 (4.2%) |
Homozygous DQB1*02 |
1:26 (3.8%) |
DQ2 only |
1:35 (2.9%) |
DQ8 only |
1:89 (1.1%) |
General Population - Genotypes unknown |
1:100 (1%) |
½ DQ2*DQB1*02 |
1:210 (0.5%) |
½ DQ2*DQA1*05 |
1:842 (0.05%) |
No HLA-DQA/DQB susceptible alleles |
1:2518 (0.04%) |
Testing for celiac disease should be done using FDA-approved HLA test kits. HLA-DQA/DQB genotyping typically provides detection of DQ2 (DQA1*0501, DQA1*0505, and DQB1*0201/*0202) and DQ8 (DQB1*0302)
Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
For example:
- HLA-DQ2(DQA1*05/DQB1*02) Positive or Negative
- HLA-DQ8(DQA1*03/DQB1*0302) Positive or Negative
A testing report typically includes DQ2, DQ8, half DQ2, homozygosity for DQB1*02, and complete DQA and DQB genotypes, along with an easy-to-interpret risk assessment.
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