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Genetic Variants Associated With Unexplained Sudden Cardiac Death in Adult White and African American Individuals

Authors :
Kathryn Harris
Joohyung Park
Renu Virmani
Neel Gadhoke
Christina M. Mayhew
Daniela T. Fuller
Libin Wang
Dheeraj R. Atmakuri
Anuj Gupta
Mack W. Bell
Maria Romero
Leah M. Weinstein
Dipti Surve
Aloke V. Finn
Linda J B Jeng
Carlos J. Collado-Rivera
Raquel Fernandez
Ryan Braumann
Braxton D. Mitchell
Sho Torii
Susie N. Hong
Emma L B Finn
Ka-Hyun Paek
Charles C. Hong
Kristin A. Maloney
Liang Guo
Ji-Eun Park
Matthew Kutyna
Atsushi Sakamoto
Brady Gaynor
Robert Kutys
Jennifer L. Hall
Anne Cornelissen
Parker J. Lee
Salomé Kuntz
Yu Sato
Bakr B. Ali
Hiroyoshi Mori
Hiroyuki Jinnouchi
Laura M. Stevens
Frank D. Kolodgie
Roma Dhingra
Megan Lynch
Roya Zarpak
David R. Fowler
Source :
JAMA Cardiology. 6:1013
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2021.

Abstract

Importance Unexplained sudden cardiac death (SCD) describes SCD with no cause identified. Genetic testing helps to diagnose inherited cardiac diseases in unexplained SCD; however, the associations between pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants of inherited cardiomyopathies (CMs) and arrhythmia syndromes and the risk of unexplained SCD in both White and African American adults living the United States has never been systematically examined. Objective To investigate cases of unexplained SCD to determine the frequency of P/LP genetic variants of inherited CMs and arrhythmia syndromes. Design, setting, and participants This genetic association study included 683 African American and White adults who died of unexplained SCD and were included in an autopsy registry. Overall, 413 individuals had DNA of acceptable quality for genetic sequencing. Data were collected from January 1995 to December 2015. A total of 30 CM genes and 38 arrhythmia genes were sequenced, and variants in these genes, curated as P/LP, were examined to study their frequency. Data analysis was performed from June 2018 to March 2021. Main outcomes and measures The frequency of P/LP variants for CM or arrhythmia in individuals with unexplained SCD. Results The median (interquartile range) age at death of the 413 included individuals was 41 (29-48) years, 259 (62.7%) were men, and 208 (50.4%) were African American adults. A total of 76 patients (18.4%) with unexplained SCD carried variants considered P/LP for CM and arrhythmia genes. In total, 52 patients (12.6%) had 49 P/LP variants for CM, 22 (5.3%) carried 23 P/LP variants for arrhythmia, and 2 (0.5%) had P/LP variants for both CM and arrhythmia. Overall, 41 P/LP variants for hypertrophic CM were found in 45 patients (10.9%), 9 P/LP variants for dilated CM were found in 11 patients (2.7%), and 10 P/LP variants for long QT syndrome were found in 11 patients (2.7%). No significant difference was found in clinical and heart characteristics between individuals with or without P/LP variants. African American and White patients were equally likely to harbor P/LP variants. Conclusions and relevance In this large genetic association study of community cases of unexplained SCD, nearly 20% of patients carried P/LP variants, suggesting that genetics may contribute to a significant number of cases of unexplained SCD. Our findings regarding both the association of unexplained SCD with CM genes and race-specific genetic variants suggest new avenues of study for this poorly understood entity.

Details

ISSN :
23806583
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c5d92a4b0e551b6e918900f747846011
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamacardio.2021.1573