Genetic Basis and Prognostic Value of Exercise QT Dynamics

Author:

van Duijvenboden Stefan12ORCID,Ramírez Julia12ORCID,Young William J.23,Mifsud Borbala24,Orini Michele12,Tinker Andrew25ORCID,Munroe Patricia B.25,Lambiase Pier D.13

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Cardiovascular Science, University College London, United Kingdom (S.v.D., J.R., M.O., P.D.L.).

2. Clinical Pharmacology, William Harvey Research Institute (S.v.D., J.R., W.J.Y., B.M., M.O., A.T., P.B.M.), Barts & The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom.

3. Barts Heart Centre, St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, United Kingdom (W.J.Y., P.D.L.).

4. College of Health and Life Sciences, Doha, Qatar (B.M.).

5. NIHR Barts Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit (A.T., P.B.M.), Barts & The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Background: Abnormal QT interval responses to heart rate (QT dynamics) is an independent risk predictor for cardiovascular disease in patients, but its genetic basis and prognostic value in a population-based cohort have not been investigated. Methods: QT dynamics during exercise and recovery were derived in 56 643 individuals from UK Biobank without a history of cardiovascular events. Genome-wide association studies were conducted to identify genetic variants and bioinformatics analyses were performed to prioritize candidate genes. The prognostic value of QT dynamics was evaluated for cardiovascular events (death or hospitalization) and all-cause mortality. Results: Heritability of QT dynamics during exercise and recovery were 10.7% and 5.4%, respectively. Genome-wide association studies identified 20 loci, of which 4 loci included genes implicated in mendelian long-QT syndrome. Five loci did not overlap with previously reported resting QT interval loci; candidate genes included KCNQ4 and KIAA1755 . Genetic risk scores were not associated with cardiovascular events in 357 882 unrelated individuals from UK Biobank. We also did not observe associations of QT dynamics during exercise and recovery with cardiovascular events. Increased QT dynamics during recovery was significantly associated with all-cause mortality in the univariate Cox regression analysis (hazard ratio, 1.09 [95% CI, 1.05–1.13], P =2.28×10 -5 ), but the association was not significant after adjusting for clinical risk factors. Conclusions: QT interval dynamics during exercise and recovery are heritable markers but do not carry independent prognostic information for clinical outcomes in the UK Biobank, a population-based cohort. Their prognostic importance may relate to cardiovascular disease cohorts where structural heart disease or ischemia may influence repolarization dynamics. The strong overlap between QT dynamics and resting QT interval loci suggests common biological pathways; however, nonoverlapping loci suggests alternative mechanisms may exist that underlie QT interval dynamics.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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