A Large Candidate Gene Survey Identifies the
KCNE1
D85N Polymorphism as a Possible Modulator of Drug-Induced Torsades de Pointes
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Published:2012-02
Issue:1
Volume:5
Page:91-99
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ISSN:1942-325X
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Container-title:Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Circ Cardiovasc Genet
Author:
Kääb Stefan1, Crawford Dana C.1, Sinner Moritz F.1, Behr Elijah R.1, Kannankeril Prince J.1, Wilde Arthur A.M.1, Bezzina Connie R.1, Schulze-Bahr Eric1, Guicheney Pascale1, Bishopric Nanette H.1, Myerburg Robert J.1, Schott Jean-Jacques1, Pfeufer Arne1, Beckmann Britt-Maria1, Martens Eimo1, Zhang Taifang1, Stallmeyer Birgit1, Zumhagen Sven1, Denjoy Isabelle1, Bardai Abdennasser1, Van Gelder Isabelle C.1, Jamshidi Yalda1, Dalageorgou Chrysoula1, Marshall Vanessa1, Jeffery Steve1, Shakir Saad1, Camm A. John1, Steinbeck Gerhard1, Perz Siegfried1, Lichtner Peter1, Meitinger Thomas1, Peters Annette1, Wichmann H.-Erich1, Ingram Christiana1, Bradford Yuki1, Carter Shannon1, Norris Kris1, Ritchie Marylyn D.1, George Alfred L.1, Roden Dan M.1
Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Medicine I, University Hospital Munich, Campus Grosshadern, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (S.K., M.F.S., B.-M.B., E.M., G.S.); Munich Heart Alliance, Munich, Germany (S.K., T.M., A.P.); the Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics (D.C.C., C.I., S.C., K.N.), Center for Human Genetics Research (D.C.C., Y.B.), Department of Pediatrics (P.J.K.), Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN; Cardiovascular Research Center, Massachusetts General...
Abstract
Background—
Drug-induced long-QT syndrome (diLQTS) is an adverse drug effect that has an important impact on drug use, development, and regulation. We tested the hypothesis that common variants in key genes controlling cardiac electric properties modify the risk of diLQTS.
Methods and Results—
In a case-control setting, we included 176 patients of European descent from North America and Europe with diLQTS, defined as documented torsades de pointes during treatment with a QT-prolonging drug. Control samples were obtained from 207 patients of European ancestry who displayed <50 ms QT lengthening during initiation of therapy with a QT-prolonging drug and 837 control subjects from the population-based KORA study. Subjects were successfully genotyped at 1424 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 18 candidate genes including 1386 SNPs tagging common haplotype blocks and 38 nonsynonymous ion channel gene SNPs. For validation, we used a set of cases (n=57) and population-based control subjects of European descent. The SNP
KCNE1
D85N (rs1805128), known to modulate an important potassium current in the heart, predicted diLQTS with an odds ratio of 9.0 (95% confidence interval, 3.5–22.9). The variant allele was present in 8.6% of cases, 2.9% of drug-exposed control subjects, and 1.8% of population control subjects. In the validation cohort, the variant allele was present in 3.5% of cases and in 1.4% of control subjects.
Conclusions—
This high-density candidate SNP approach identified a key potassium channel susceptibility allele that may be associated with the rare adverse drug reaction torsades de pointes.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Genetics
Cited by
148 articles.
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