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Association of a 62 Variants Type 2 Diabetes Genetic Risk Score With Markers of Subclinical Atherosclerosis

Authors :
Edmond K. Kabagambe
Riccardo C. Bonadonna
Xiuqing Guo
Bianca Porneala
Joanne M. Murabito
Jie Yao
Christopher J. O'Donnell
David S. Siscovick
Stephen S. Rich
Jason L. Vassy
David R. Jacobs
Marie-France Hivert
Myriam Fornage
Mercedes R. Carnethon
Patricia A. Peyser
Marco Dauriz
Sharon L.R. Kardia
Donald W. Bowden
J. Jeffrey Carr
Enzo Bonora
James B. Meigs
Laura J. Rasmussen-Torvik
Josée Dupuis
Nefertiti Durant
Jerome I. Rotter
Jose C. Florez
Lawrence F. Bielak
Cora E. Lewis
Source :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics. 8:507-515
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2015.

Abstract

Background— Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) and cardiovascular disease share risk factors and subclinical atherosclerosis (SCA) predicts events in those with and without diabetes mellitus. T2D genetic risk may predict both T2D and SCA. We hypothesized that greater T2D genetic risk is associated with higher extent of SCA. Methods and Results— In a cross-sectional analysis, including ≤9210 European Americans, 3773 African Americans, 1446 Hispanic Americans, and 773 Chinese Americans without known cardiovascular disease and enrolled in the Framingham Heart Study, Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults, Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, and Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy studies, we tested a 62 T2D-loci genetic risk score for association with measures of SCA, including coronary artery or abdominal aortic calcium score, common and internal carotid artery intima-media thickness, and ankle-brachial index. We used ancestry-stratified linear regression models, with random effects accounting for family relatedness when appropriate, applying a genetic-only (adjusted for sex) and a full SCA risk factors–adjusted model (significance, P P =0.004) and with common carotid artery intima-media thickness in the Framingham Heart Study ( P =0.009) was not confirmed in other study cohorts, either separately or in meta-analysis. Secondary analyses showed no consistent associations with β-cell and insulin resistance genetic risk sub-scores in the Framingham Heart Study and in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults. Conclusions— SCA does not have a major genetic component linked to a burden of 62 T2D loci identified by large genome-wide association studies. A shared T2D-SCA genetic basis, if any, might become apparent from better functional information about both T2D and cardiovascular disease risk loci.

Details

ISSN :
19423268 and 1942325X
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45912bc386c9759278d2a44b413ef3a2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circgenetics.114.000740