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- Genome-wide meta-analysis of SNP-by9-ACEI/ARB and SNP-by-thiazide diuretic and effect on serum potassium in cohorts of European and African ancestry.
Genome-wide meta-analysis of SNP-by9-ACEI/ARB and SNP-by-thiazide diuretic and effect on serum potassium in cohorts of European and African ancestry.
Citation | “Genome-Wide Meta-Analysis Of Snp-By9-Acei/Arb And Snp-By-Thiazide Diuretic And Effect On Serum Potassium In Cohorts Of European And African Ancestry.”. The Pharmacogenomics Journal, pp. 97-108. . |
Center | UCSD-UCLA |
Author | Marguerite R Irvin, Colleen M Sitlani, Raymond Noordam, Christie L Avery, Joshua C Bis, James S Floyd, Jin Li, Nita A Limdi, Vinodh Srinivasasainagendra, James Stewart, Renée de Mutsert, Dennis O Mook-Kanamori, Leonard Lipovich, Erica L Kleinbrink, Albert Smith, Traci M Bartz, Eric A Whitsel, André G Uitterlinden, Kerri L Wiggins, James G Wilson, Degui Zhi, Bruno H Stricker, Jerome I Rotter, Donna K Arnett, Bruce M Psaty, Leslie A Lange |
Abstract |
We evaluated interactions of SNP-by-ACE-I/ARB and SNP-by-TD on serum potassium (K+) among users of antihypertensive treatments (anti-HTN). Our study included seven European-ancestry (EA) (N = 4835) and four African-ancestry (AA) cohorts (N = 2016). We performed race-stratified, fixed-effect, inverse-variance-weighted meta-analyses of 2.5 million SNP-by-drug interaction estimates; race-combined meta-analysis; and trans-ethnic fine-mapping. Among EAs, we identified 11 significant SNPs (P < 5 × 10) for SNP-ACE-I/ARB interactions on serum K+ that were located between NR2F1-AS1 and ARRDC3-AS1 on chromosome 5 (top SNP rs6878413 P = 1.7 × 10; ratio of serum K+ in ACE-I/ARB exposed compared to unexposed is 1.0476, 1.0280, 1.0088 for the TT, AT, and AA genotypes, respectively). Trans-ethnic fine mapping identified the same group of SNPs on chromosome 5 as genome-wide significant for the ACE-I/ARB analysis. In conclusion, SNP-by-ACE-I /ARB interaction analyses uncovered loci that, if replicated, could have future implications for the prevention of arrhythmias due to anti-HTN treatment-related hyperkalemia. Before these loci can be identified as clinically relevant, future validation studies of equal or greater size in comparison to our discovery effort are needed. |
Year of Publication |
2019
|
Journal |
The pharmacogenomics journal
|
Volume |
19
|
Issue |
1
|
Number of Pages |
97-108
|
Date Published |
12/2019
|
ISSN Number |
1473-1150
|
DOI |
10.1038/s41397-018-0021-9
|
Alternate Journal |
Pharmacogenomics J.
|
PMID |
29855607
|
PMCID |
PMC6274589
|
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