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Genetic Architecture of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm in the Million Veteran Program

Authors :
Derek Klarin
Shefali Setia Verma
Renae Judy
Ozan Dikilitas
Brooke N. Wolford
Ishan Paranjpe
Michael G. Levin
Cuiping Pan
Catherine Tcheandjieu
Joshua M. Spin
Julie Lynch
Themistocles L. Assimes
Linn Åldstedt Nyrønning
Erney Mattsson
Todd L. Edwards
Josh Denny
Eric Larson
Ming Ta Michael Lee
David Carrell
Yanfei Zhang
Gail P. Jarvik
Ali G. Gharavi
John Harley
Frank Mentch
Jennifer A. Pacheco
Hakon Hakonarson
Anne Heidi Skogholt
Laurent Thomas
Maiken Elvestad Gabrielsen
Kristian Hveem
Jonas Bille Nielsen
Wei Zhou
Lars Fritsche
Jie Huang
Pradeep Natarajan
Yan V. Sun
Scott L. DuVall
Daniel J. Rader
Kelly Cho
Kyong-Mi Chang
Peter W.F. Wilson
Christopher J. O’Donnell
Sekar Kathiresan
Salvatore T. Scali
Scott A. Berceli
Cristen Willer
Gregory T. Jones
Matthew J. Bown
Girish Nadkarni
Iftikhar J. Kullo
Marylyn Ritchie
Scott M. Damrauer
Philip S. Tsao
J. Michael Gaziano
Rachel Ramoni
Jean Beckham
Jim Breeling
Grant Huang
Sumitra Muralidhar
J.P. Casas Romero
Jennifer Moser
Stacey B. Whitbourne
Jessica V. Brewer
John Concato
Stuart Warren
Dean P. Argyres
Brady Stephens
Mary T. Brophy
Donald E. Humphries
Nhan Do
Shahpoor Shayan
Xuan-Mai T. Nguyen
Saiju Pyarajan
Elizabeth Hauser
Yan Sun
Hongyu Zhao
Peter Wilson
Rachel McArdle
Louis Dellitalia
Clement J. Zablocki
Jeffrey Whittle
John Wells
Salvador Gutierrez
Gretchen Gibson
Laurence Kaminsky
Gerardo Villareal
Scott Kinlay
Junzhe Xu
Mark Hamner
Kathlyn Sue Haddock
Sujata Bhushan
Pran Iruvanti
Michael Godschalk
Zuhair Ballas
Malcolm Buford
Stephen Mastorides
Jon Klein
Nora Ratcliffe
Hermes Florez
Alan Swann
Maureen Murdoch
Peruvemba Sriram
Shing Shing Yeh
Ronald Washburn
Darshana Jhala
Samuel Aguayo
David Cohen
Satish Sharma
John Callaghan
Kris Ann Oursler
Mary Whooley
Sunil Ahuja
Amparo Gutierrez
Ronald Schifman
Jennifer Greco
Michael Rauchman
Richard Servatius
Mary Oehlert
Agnes Wallbom
Ronald Fernando
Timothy Morgan
Todd Stapley
Scott Sherman
Gwenevere Anderson
Philip Tsao
Elif Sonel
Edward Boyko
Laurence Meyer
Samir Gupta
Joseph Fayad
Adriana Hung
Jack Lichy
Robin Hurley
Brooks Robey
Robert Striker
Source :
Circulation
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.

Abstract

Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.<br />Background: Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is an important cause of cardiovascular mortality; however, its genetic determinants remain incompletely defined. In total, 10 previously identified risk loci explain a small fraction of AAA heritability. Methods: We performed a genome-wide association study in the Million Veteran Program testing ≈18 million DNA sequence variants with AAA (7642 cases and 172 172 controls) in veterans of European ancestry with independent replication in up to 4972 cases and 99 858 controls. We then used mendelian randomization to examine the causal effects of blood pressure on AAA. We examined the association of AAA risk variants with aneurysms in the lower extremity, cerebral, and iliac arterial beds, and derived a genome-wide polygenic risk score (PRS) to identify a subset of the population at greater risk for disease. Results: Through a genome-wide association study, we identified 14 novel loci, bringing the total number of known significant AAA loci to 24. In our mendelian randomization analysis, we demonstrate that a genetic increase of 10 mm Hg in diastolic blood pressure (odds ratio, 1.43 [95% CI, 1.24–1.66]; P=1.6×10−6), as opposed to systolic blood pressure (odds ratio, 1.06 [95% CI, 0.97–1.15]; P=0.2), likely has a causal relationship with AAA development. We observed that 19 of 24 AAA risk variants associate with aneurysms in at least 1 other vascular territory. A 29-variant PRS was strongly associated with AAA (odds ratioPRS, 1.26 [95% CI, 1.18–1.36]; PPRS=2.7×10−11 per SD increase in PRS), independent of family history and smoking risk factors (odds ratioPRS+family history+smoking, 1.24 [95% CI, 1.14–1.35]; PPRS=1.27×10−6). Using this PRS, we identified a subset of the population with AAA prevalence greater than that observed in screening trials informing current guidelines. Conclusions: We identify novel AAA genetic associations with therapeutic implications and identify a subset of the population at significantly increased genetic risk of AAA independent of family history. Our data suggest that extending current screening guidelines to include testing to identify those with high polygenic AAA risk, once the cost of genotyping becomes comparable with that of screening ultrasound, would significantly increase the yield of current screening at reasonable cost.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
142
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b5136f0461abf326890a982dea6823e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.120.047544