Publication | Open Access
Pharmacogenomic Association of Nonsynonymous SNPs in <i>SIGLEC12</i> , <i>A1BG</i> , and the Selectin Region and Cardiovascular Outcomes
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Citations
27
References
2013
Year
Top HitsHypertensionGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PolymorphismSelectin RegionGenome-wide Association StudyPharmacogenomicsPublic HealthCardiovascular OutcomesMolecular DiagnosticsNonsynonymous SnpsCardiovascular EpidemiologyAntihypertensive TherapyVascular BiologyPharmacologyGenomic MedicineEpidemiologyAllelic VariantGenetic DeterminantCardiovascular DiseaseNovel Pharmacogenetic MarkersMedicineCardiovascular Genetics
We sought to identify novel pharmacogenetic markers associated with cardiovascular outcomes in patients with hypertension on antihypertensive therapy. We genotyped a 1:4 case:control cohort (n=1345) on the Illumina HumanCVD Beadchip from the INternational VErapamil SR-Trandolapril STudy (INVEST), where participants were randomized to a β-blocker strategy or a calcium channel blocker strategy. Genome-spanning single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)×treatment interaction analyses of nonsynonymous SNPs were conducted in white and Hispanic race/ethnic groups. Top hits from whites were tested in Hispanics for consistency. A genetic risk score was constructed from the top 3 signals and tested in the Nordic Diltiazem study. SIGLEC12 rs16982743 and A1BG rs893184 had a significant interaction with treatment strategy for adverse cardiovascular outcomes (INVEST whites and Hispanics combined interaction P=0.0038 and 0.0036, respectively). A genetic risk score, including rs16982743, rs893184, and rs4525 in F5, was significantly associated with treatment-related adverse cardiovascular outcomes in whites and Hispanics from the INVEST study and in the Nordic Diltiazem study (meta-analysis interaction P=2.39×10(-5)). In patients with a genetic risk score of 0 or 1, calcium channel blocker treatment was associated with lower risk (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]=0.60 [0.42-0.86]), and in those with a genetic risk score of 2 to 3, calcium channel blocker treatment was associated with higher risk (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]=1.31 [1.08-1.59]). These results suggest that cardiovascular outcomes may differ based on SIGLEC12, A1BG, F5 genotypes, and antihypertensive treatment strategy. These specific genetic associations and our risk score provide insight into a potential approach to personalized antihypertensive treatment selection.
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