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Modification effect of ideal cardiovascular health metrics on genetic association with incident heart failure in the China Kadoorie Biobank and the UK Biobank.

Authors :
Yang, Ruotong
Lv, Jun
Yu, Canqing
Guo, Yu
Pei, Pei
Huang, Ninghao
Yang, Ling
Millwood, Iona Y.
Walters, Robin G.
Chen, Yiping
Du, Huaidong
Tao, Ran
Chen, Junshi
Chen, Zhengming
Clarke, Robert
Huang, Tao
Li, Liming
on behalf of the China Kadoorie Biobank Collaborative Group
Collins, Rory
Peto, Richard
Source :
BMC Medicine; 10/22/2021, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Both genetic and cardiovascular factors contribute to the risk of developing heart failure (HF), but whether idea cardiovascular health metrics (ICVHMs) offset the genetic association with incident HF remains unclear.<bold>Objectives: </bold>To investigate the genetic association with incident HF as well as the modification effect of ICVHMs on such genetic association in Chinese and British populations.<bold>Methods: </bold>An ICVHMs based on smoking, drinking, physical activity, diets, body mass index, waist circumference, blood pressure, blood glucose, and blood lipids, and a polygenic risk score (PRS) for HF were constructed in the China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB) of 96,014 participants and UK Biobank (UKB) of 335,782 participants which were free from HF and severe chronic diseases at baseline.<bold>Results: </bold>During the median follow-up of 11.38 and 8.73 years, 1451 and 3169 incident HF events were documented in CKB and UKB, respectively. HF risk increased monotonically with the increase of PRS per standard deviation (CKB: hazard ratio [HR], 1.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.07, 1.32; UKB: 1.07; 1.03, 1.11; P for trend < 0.001). Each point increase in ICVHMs was associated with 15% and 20% lower risk of incident HF in CKB (0.85; 0.81, 0.90) and UKB (0.80; 0.77, 0.82), respectively. Compared with unfavorable ICVHMs, favorable ICVHMs was associated with a lower HF risk, with 0.71 (0.44, 1.15), 0.41 (0.22, 0.77), and 0.48 (0.30, 0.77) in the low, intermediate, and high genetic risk in CKB and 0.34 (0.26, 0.44), 0.32 (0.25, 0.41), and 0.37 (0.28, 0.47) in UKB (P for multiplicative interaction > 0.05). Participants with low genetic risk and favorable ICVHMs, as compared with high genetic risk and unfavorable ICVHMs, had 56~72% lower risk of HF (CKB 0.44; 0.28, 0.70; UKB 0.28; 0.22, 0.37). No additive interaction between PRS and ICVHMs was observed (relative excess risk due to interaction was 0.05 [-0.22, 0.33] in CKB and 0.04 [-0.14, 0.22] in UKB).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>In CKB and UKB, genetic risk and ICVHMs were independently associated with the risk of incident HF, which suggested that adherence to favorable cardiovascular health status was associated with a lower HF risk among participants with all gradients of genetic risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17417015
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153158777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-021-02122-1