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The previous
slides presented risk information that pertain to Caucasian, African
American and Asian populations in general.
However, in families where there is already one person with T1D,
the risk to unaffected relatives is much higher than that for the
general population. For example,
in Caucasian families, siblings of an individual with T1D are about 15
times more likely to develop the disease then a person from the general
population (i.e., without a family history of the disease).
Since siblings
share half their genes with each other, researchers often look at
whether the HLA haplotypes carried by an unaffected sibling are the same
as those carried by the affected individual. Unaffected siblings can
share two, one or zero HLA haplotypes with their affected brother or
sister. As can be seen, the T1D
risk for a sibling who has the same two HLA haplotypes as their T1D
sibling is quite high (about 25%).
If they share one or zero HLA haplotypes with their affected
sibling, their risk is much lower, about 8% and 1%, respectively. The
fact that the risk for individuals who have no shared HLA haplotype is
still increased compared to that for the general population suggests
that genes other than those in the HLA region must also increase
susceptibility for the disease.
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