Genome-wide association study of asthma exacerbations despite inhaled corticosteroid use

Author:

Hernandez-Pacheco NataliaORCID,Vijverberg Susanne J.,Herrera-Luis EstherORCID,Li Jiang,Sio Yang Yie,Granell Raquel,Corrales Almudena,Maroteau Cyrielle,Lethem Ryan,Perez-Garcia JavierORCID,Farzan Niloufar,Repnik Katja,Gorenjak MarioORCID,Soares PatriciaORCID,Karimi LeilaORCID,Schieck Maximilian,Pérez-Méndez LinaORCID,Berce Vojko,Tavendale Roger,Eng Celeste,Sardon OlaiaORCID,Kull Inger,Mukhopadhyay Somnath,Pirmohamed Munir,Verhamme Katia M.C.ORCID,Burchard Esteban G.,Kabesch Michael,Hawcutt Daniel B.,Melén ErikORCID,Potočnik Uroš,Chew Fook TimORCID,Tantisira Kelan G.,Turner SteveORCID,Palmer Colin N.,Flores Carlos,Pino-Yanes MariaORCID,Maitland-van der Zee Anke H.

Abstract

RationaleSubstantial variability in response to asthma treatment with inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) has been described among individuals and populations, suggesting the contribution of genetic factors. Nonetheless, only a few genes have been identified to date. We aimed to identify genetic variants associated with asthma exacerbations despite ICS use in European children and young adults and to validate the findings in non-Europeans. Moreover, we explored whether a gene-set enrichment analysis could suggest potential novel asthma therapies.MethodsA genome-wide association study (GWAS) of asthma exacerbations was tested in 2681 children of European descent treated with ICS from eight studies. Suggestive association signals were followed up for replication in 538 European asthma patients. Further evaluation was performed in 1773 non-Europeans. Variants revealed by published GWAS were assessed for replication. Additionally, gene-set enrichment analysis focused on drugs was performed.Results10 independent variants were associated with asthma exacerbations despite ICS treatment in the discovery phase (p≤5×10−6). Of those, one variant at the CACNA2D3-WNT5A locus was nominally replicated in Europeans (rs67026078; p=0.010), but this was not validated in non-European populations. Five other genes associated with ICS response in previous studies were replicated. Additionally, an enrichment of associations in genes regulated by trichostatin A treatment was found.ConclusionsThe intergenic region of CACNA2D3 and WNT5A was revealed as a novel locus for asthma exacerbations despite ICS treatment in European populations. Genes associated were related to trichostatin A, suggesting that this drug could regulate the molecular mechanisms involved in treatment response.

Funder

Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences

Hjärt-Lungfonden

GlaxoSmithKline

Wellcome Trust

ZonMw

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

ERACoSysMed 1st Joint Transnational Call from the European Union under the Horizon 2020

NHS Research Scotland

National Institutes of Health

Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities

University of Bristol

ISCIII and European Regional Development Fund

UK Medical Research Council and Wellcome

RWJF Amos Medical Faculty Development Program

Harry Wm. and Diana V. Hind Distinguished Professor in Pharmaceutical Sciences II and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

American Asthma Foundation

Slovenian Research Agency and Ministry of Education, Science and Sport of the Republic of Slovenia

Vetenskapsrådet

Sandler Family Foundation

Region Stockholm

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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