- Clifford, Royce E;
- Maihofer, Adam X;
- Chatzinakos, Chris;
- Coleman, Jonathan RI;
- Daskalakis, Nikolaos P;
- Gasperi, Marianna;
- Hogan, Kelleigh;
- Mikita, Elizabeth A;
- Stein, Murray B;
- Tcheandjieu, Catherine;
- Telese, Francesca;
- Zuo, Yanning;
- Ryan, Allen F;
- Nievergelt, Caroline M
Tinnitus is a heritable, highly prevalent auditory disorder treated by multiple medical specialties. Previous GWAS indicated high genetic correlations between tinnitus and hearing loss, with little indication of differentiating signals. We present a GWAS meta-analysis, triple previous sample sizes, and expand to non-European ancestries. GWAS in 596,905 Million Veteran Program subjects identified 39 tinnitus loci, and identified genes related to neuronal synapses and cochlear structural support. Applying state-of-the-art analytic tools, we confirm a large number of shared variants, but also a distinct genetic architecture of tinnitus, with higher polygenicity and large proportion of variants not shared with hearing difficulty. Tissue-expression analysis for tinnitus infers broad enrichment across most brain tissues, in contrast to hearing difficulty. Finally, tinnitus is not only correlated with hearing loss, but also with a spectrum of psychiatric disorders, providing potential new avenues for treatment. This study establishes tinnitus as a distinct disorder separate from hearing difficulties.