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Genome Wide Analysis of Drug-Induced Torsades de Pointes: Lack of Common Variants with Large Effect Sizes

Authors :
Behr, Elijah R.
Ritchie, Marylyn D.
Tanaka, Toshihiro
Kääb, Stefan
Crawford, Dana C.
Nicoletti, Paola
Floratos, Aristidis
Kannankeril, Prince J.
Sinner, Moritz F.
M. Wilde, Arthur A.
Bezzina, Connie R.
Schulze-Bahr, Eric
Zumhagen, Sven
Guicheney, Pascale
Bishopric, Nanette H.
Marshall, Vanessa
Shakir, Saad
Dalageorgou, Chrysoula
Jamshidi, Yalda
Bevan, Steve
Bastiaenen, Rachel
Myerburg, Robert J.
Schott, Jean-Jacques
Camm, A. John
Steinbeck, Gerhard
Norris, Kris
Altman, Russ B.
Tatonetti, Nicholas P.
Jeffery, Steve
Kubo, Michiaki
Nakamura, Yusuke
Shen, Yufeng
George Jr, Alfred L.
Roden, Dan M.
Publisher :
Columbia University

Abstract

Marked prolongation of the QT interval on the electrocardiogram associated with the polymorphic ventricular tachycardia Torsades de Pointes is a serious adverse event during treatment with antiarrhythmic drugs and other culprit medications, and is a common cause for drug relabeling and withdrawal. Although clinical risk factors have been identified, the syndrome remains unpredictable in an individual patient. Here we used genome-wide association analysis to search for common predisposing genetic variants. Cases of drug-induced Torsades de Pointes (diTdP), treatment tolerant controls, and general population controls were ascertained across multiple sites using common definitions, and genotyped on the Illumina 610k or 1M-Duo BeadChips. Principal Components Analysis was used to select 216 Northwestern European diTdP cases and 771 ancestry-matched controls, including treatment-tolerant and general population subjects. With these sample sizes, there is 80% power to detect a variant at genome-wide significance with minor allele frequency of 10% and conferring an odds ratio of ≥2.7. Tests of association were carried out for each single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) by logistic regression adjusting for gender and population structure. No SNP reached genome wide-significance; the variant with the lowest P value was rs2276314, a non-synonymous coding variant in C18orf21 (p = 3×10−7, odds ratio = 2, 95% confidence intervals: 1.5–2.6). The haplotype formed by rs2276314 and a second SNP, rs767531, was significantly more frequent in controls than cases (p = 3×10−9). Expanding the number of controls and a gene-based analysis did not yield significant associations. This study argues that common genomic variants do not contribute importantly to risk for drug-induced Torsades de Pointes across multiple drugs.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ddcff539b902d960e41616987b6d9a48