Medical Genetics: Multifactorial Inheritance
This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician with any questions you have regarding a medical condition. Your provider will offer referrals or treatment plans based on your specific condition or diagnosis.
What is multifactorial inheritance?
Multifactorial inheritance is when more than 1 factor causes a trait or health problem, such as a birth defect or chronic illness. Genes can be a factor, but other things that aren't genes can play a part, too. These may include:
Nutrition
Lifestyle
Alcohol and tobacco
Some medicines
An illness
Pollution
Often one sex—males or females—is affected more often than the other for certain traits or disorders.
Risks that run in the family
Multifactorial conditions tend to run in families. This is because they are partly caused by genes. Your risk for a multifactorial trait or condition depends on how close you are to a family member with the trait or condition.
For example, you’re at higher risk for a trait or disorder if your brother or sister has it. You’re at lower risk if a cousin has it. Family members share a portion of genes in common, depending upon their place in the family tree. Your parents, siblings, and children share about half of your genes. But because multifactorial disorders are caused by more than 1 factor, it’s often hard to determine a person’s real risk of developing a disorder or passing it on.
Types of multifactorial traits and disorders
Health problems that are caused by both genes and other factors include:
Birth defects such as neural tube defects and cleft palate
Cancers of the breast, ovaries, bowel, prostate, and skin
High blood pressure and high cholesterol
Diabetes
Alzheimer disease
Schizophrenia
Bipolar disorder
Arthritis
Osteoporosis
Skin conditions such as psoriasis, moles, and eczema
Asthma and allergies
Multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune disorders
Learning your risks
If you have family members with any of the above health problems, talk with your healthcare provider about your risks. They can give you information about how to lower your risk for certain conditions or how to manage a condition.