Genome-wide association study-based prediction of atrial fibrillation using artificial intelligence

Author:

Kwon Oh-Seok,Hong Myunghee,Kim Tae-Hoon,Hwang Inseok,Shim Jaemin,Choi Eue-Keun,Lim Hong Euy,Yu Hee Tae,Uhm Jae-Sun,Joung Boyoung,Oh Seil,Lee Moon-Hyoung,Kim Young-Hoon,Pak Hui-NamORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveWe previously reported early-onset atrial fibrillation (AF) associated genetic loci among a Korean population. We explored whether the AF-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) selected from the Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) of an external large cohort has a prediction power for AF in Korean population through a convolutional neural network (CNN).MethodsThis study included 6358 subjects (872 cases, 5486 controls) from the Korean population GWAS data. We extracted the lists of SNPs at each p value threshold of the association statistics from three different previously reported ethnical-specific GWASs. The Korean GWAS data were divided into training (64%), validation (16%) and test (20%) sets, and a stratified K-fold cross-validation was performed and repeated five times after data shuffling.ResultsThe CNN-GWAS predictive power for AF had an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.78±0.01 based on the Japanese GWAS, AUC of 0.79±0.01 based on the European GWAS, and AUC of 0.82±0.01 based on the multiethnic GWAS, respectively. Gradient-weighted class activation mapping assigned high saliency scores for AF associated SNPs, and the PITX2 obtained the highest saliency score. The CNN-GWAS did not show AF prediction power by SNPs with non-significant p value subset (AUC 0.56±0.01) despite larger numbers of SNPs. The CNN-GWAS had no prediction power for odd–even registration numbers (AUC 0.51±0.01).ConclusionsAF can be predicted by genetic information alone with moderate accuracy. The CNN-GWAS can be a robust and useful tool for detecting polygenic diseases by capturing the cumulative effects and genetic interactions of moderately associated but statistically significant SNPs.Trial registration numberNCT02138695.

Funder

the Ministry of Health & Welfare, Republic of Korea

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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