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Genetic variation in apolipoprotein A-I concentrations and risk of coronary artery disease

Authors :
Marjo-Riitta Järvelin
Mika Ala-Korpela
Jorma Viikari
Michael V. Holmes
Veikko Salomaa
Olga Anufrieva
Markus Perola
Qin Wang
Minna K. Karjalainen
Mika Kähönen
Johannes Kettunen
Terho Lehtimäki
Aki S. Havulinna
Kati Kristiansson
Olli T. Raitakari
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

RationaleApolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) infusions represent a potential novel therapeutic approach for the prevention of coronary artery disease (CAD) with phase III cardiovascular outcome trials currently underway. Although circulating apoA-I levels inversely associate with risk of CAD, the evidence base of this representing a causal relationship is lacking.ObjectiveTo assess the causal role of apoA-I in CAD using human genetics.Methods and ResultsWe identified a variant (rs12225230) in APOA1 locus that associated with circulating apoA-I concentrations at GWAS significance (P−8) in 20,370 Finnish participants and meta-analyzed our data with a previous genome-wide association study of apoA-I. We obtained genetic estimates of CAD from UK Biobank and CARDIoGRAMplusC4D (totaling 122,733 CAD cases) and conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis. We compared our genetic findings to observational associations of apoA-I with risk of CAD in 918 incident CAD cases among 11,535 individuals from population-based prospective cohorts. We also summarized the available evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of apoA-I infusion therapies reporting CAD events. ApoA-I was associated with a lower risk of CAD in observational analyses (HR 0.81; 95%CI: 0.75, 0.88; per 1-SD higher apoA-I), with the association showing a dose-response relationship. Rs12225230 associated with apoA-I concentrations (per-C allele beta 0.076 SD; SE: 0.013; P=1.5×10−9) but not with potential confounders. In Mendelian randomization analyses, apoA-I was not related to risk of CAD (OR 1.13; 95%CI: 0.98, 1.30 per 1-SD higher apoA-I), which was different to the observational association (P-hetConclusionsGenetic evidence fails to support a cardioprotective role for apoA-I. This casts doubt on the likely benefit of apoA-I infusion therapy in the ongoing phase III cardiovascular outcome trial.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fb902cee2cff64609b77cc9fe34295a