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Polymorphism Influences the Cardiovascular Benefit of Fenofibrate in Type 2 Diabetes: Findings From ACCORD-Lipid.

Citation
Morieri, M. L., et al. “ Polymorphism Influences The Cardiovascular Benefit Of Fenofibrate In Type 2 Diabetes: Findings From Accord-Lipid.”. Diabetes, pp. 771-783.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Mario Luca Morieri, Hetal S Shah, Jennifer Sjaarda, Petra A Lenzini, Hannah Campbell, Alison A Motsinger-Reif, He Gao, Laura Lovato, Sabrina Prudente, Assunta Pandolfi, Marcus G Pezzolesi, Ronald J Sigal, Guillaume Paré, Santica M Marcovina, Daniel M Rotroff, Elisabetta Patorno, Luana Mercuri, Vincenzo Trischitta, Emily Y Chew, Peter Kraft, John B Buse, Michael J Wagner, Sharon Cresci, Hertzel C Gerstein, Henry N Ginsberg, Josyf C Mychaleckyj, Alessandro Doria
Abstract

The cardiovascular benefits of fibrates have been shown to be heterogeneous and to depend on the presence of atherogenic dyslipidemia. We investigated whether genetic variability in the gene, coding for the pharmacological target of fibrates (PPAR-α), could be used to improve the selection of patients with type 2 diabetes who may derive cardiovascular benefit from addition of this treatment to statins. We identified a common variant at the locus (rs6008845, C/T) displaying a study-wide significant influence on the effect of fenofibrate on major cardiovascular events (MACE) among 3,065 self-reported white subjects treated with simvastatin and randomized to fenofibrate or placebo in the ACCORD-Lipid trial. T/T homozygotes (36% of participants) experienced a 51% MACE reduction in response to fenofibrate (hazard ratio 0.49; 95% CI 0.34-0.72), whereas no benefit was observed for other genotypes ( = 3.7 × 10). The rs6008845-by-fenofibrate interaction on MACE was replicated in African Americans from ACCORD ( = 585, = 0.02) and in external cohorts (ACCORD-BP, ORIGIN, and TRIUMPH, total = 3059, = 0.005). Remarkably, rs6008845 T/T homozygotes experienced a cardiovascular benefit from fibrate even in the absence of atherogenic dyslipidemia. Among these individuals, but not among carriers of other genotypes, fenofibrate treatment was associated with lower circulating levels of CCL11-a proinflammatory and atherogenic chemokine also known as eotaxin ( for rs6008845-by-fenofibrate interaction = 0.003). The GTEx data set revealed regulatory functions of rs6008845 on expression in many tissues. In summary, we have found a common regulatory variant that influences the cardiovascular effects of fenofibrate and that could be used to identify patients with type 2 diabetes who would derive benefit from fenofibrate treatment, in addition to those with atherogenic dyslipidemia.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
69
Issue
4
Number of Pages
771-783
Date Published
04/2020
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db19-0973
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
31974142
PMCID
PMC7085251
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