Genomic prediction of coronary heart disease

Gad Abraham(The University of Melbourne), Aki S. Havulinna(Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare), Oneil G. Bhalala(The University of Melbourne), Sean Byars(The University of Melbourne), Alysha De Livera(The University of Melbourne), Laxman Yetukuri(University of Helsinki), Emmi Tikkanen(Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland), Markus Perola(Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland), Heribert Schunkert(German Centre for Cardiovascular Research), Eric J.G. Sijbrands(Erasmus MC), Aarno Palotie(Broad Institute), Nilesh J. Samani(Glenfield Hospital), Veikko Salomaa(Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare), Samuli Ripatti(University of Helsinki), Michael Inouye(University of Helsinki)
European Heart Journal
September 21, 2016
Cited by 348Open Access
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Abstract

AIMS: Genetics plays an important role in coronary heart disease (CHD) but the clinical utility of genomic risk scores (GRSs) relative to clinical risk scores, such as the Framingham Risk Score (FRS), is unclear. Our aim was to construct and externally validate a CHD GRS, in terms of lifetime CHD risk and relative to traditional clinical risk scores. METHODS AND RESULTS: We generated a GRS of 49 310 SNPs based on a CARDIoGRAMplusC4D Consortium meta-analysis of CHD, then independently tested it using five prospective population cohorts (three FINRISK cohorts, combined n = 12 676, 757 incident CHD events; two Framingham Heart Study cohorts (FHS), combined n = 3406, 587 incident CHD events). The GRS was associated with incident CHD (FINRISK HR = 1.74, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.61-1.86 per S.D. of GRS; Framingham HR = 1.28, 95% CI 1.18-1.38), and was largely unchanged by adjustment for known risk factors, including family history. Integration of the GRS with the FRS or ACC/AHA13 scores improved the 10 years risk prediction (meta-analysis C-index: +1.5-1.6%, P < 0.001), particularly for individuals ≥60 years old (meta-analysis C-index: +4.6-5.1%, P < 0.001). Importantly, the GRS captured substantially different trajectories of absolute risk, with men in the top 20% of attaining 10% cumulative CHD risk 12-18 y earlier than those in the bottom 20%. High genomic risk was partially compensated for by low systolic blood pressure, low cholesterol level, and non-smoking. CONCLUSIONS: A GRS based on a large number of SNPs improves CHD risk prediction and encodes different trajectories of lifetime risk not captured by traditional clinical risk scores.


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