Contribution of higher risk genes and European admixture to Crohnʼs disease in African Americans
Ming‐Hsi Wang(Johns Hopkins University), Steven R. Brant(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Subra Kugathasan(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Judy H. Cho(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Geoffrey C. Nguyen(Johns Hopkins Medicine), Themistocles Dassopoulos(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Richard H. Duerr(University of Pittsburgh), Kent D. Taylor(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Kim L. Isaacs(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), James D. Lewis(University of Pennsylvania), Jean G. Ford(Johns Hopkins University), Duane T. Smoot(Adecco (Switzerland)), Carmen Cuffari(Johns Hopkins University), Maria Oliva‐Hemker(Johns Hopkins University), John D. Rioux(Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland), Lisa W. Datta(Johns Hopkins University), Howard A. Kader(University of Maryland, Baltimore), John F. Valentine(University of Utah), Rick A. Kittles(Morehouse School of Medicine), Mary L. Harris(Johns Hopkins University), Yuqiong Wu(Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University), Linda Kao(Johns Hopkins University), Toshihiko Okazaki(Johns Hopkins University), Mark S. Silverberg(Sinai Health System), Stanley Hooker(University of Chicago), Michael Torbenson(Mayo Clinic)
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