Affiliation:
1. Department of Cardiology Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark
2. Department of Internal Medicine Horsens Regional Hospital Horsens Denmark
3. Department of Cardiology Hospital Unit West Herning Denmark
4. Department of Biomedicine Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark
5. Department of Cardiology Silkeborg Regional Hospital Silkeborg Denmark
6. deCODE Genetics/Amgen, Inc. Reykjavik Iceland
Abstract
Background
Polygenic risk scores (
PRS
s) based on risk variants from genome‐wide association studies predict coronary artery disease (
CAD
) risk. However, it is unknown whether the
PRS
is associated with specific
CAD
characteristics.
Methods and Results
We consecutively included 1645 patients with suspected stable
CAD
undergoing coronary computed tomography angiography. A multilocus
PRS
was calculated as the weighted sum of
CAD
risk variants. Plaques were evaluated using an 18‐segment model and characterized by stenosis severity and composition (soft [0%‐19% calcified], mixed‐soft [20%‐49% calcified], mixed‐calcified [50%‐79% calcified], or calcified [≥80% calcified]). Coronary artery calcium score and segment stenosis score were used to characterize plaque burden. For each standard deviation increase in the
PRS
, coronary artery calcium score increased by 78% (
P
=4.1e‐26) and segment stenosis score increased by 16% (
P
=2.4e‐29) in the fully adjusted model. The
PRS
was associated with a higher prevalence of obstructive plaques (odds ratio [
OR
]
: 1.78,
P
=5.6e‐16), calcified (
OR
: 1.69,
P
=6.5e‐17), mixed‐calcified (
OR
: 1.67,
P
=7.3e‐9), mixed‐soft (
OR
: 1.45,
P
=1.6e‐6), and soft plaques (
OR
: 1.49,
P
=2.5e‐6), and a higher prevalence of plaque in each coronary vessel (all
P
<1.0e‐4). However, when analyzing data on a plaque level (3007 segments with plaque in 849 patients) the
PRS
was not associated with stenosis severity, plaque composition, or localization (all
P
>0.05).
Conclusions
Our results suggest that polygenic risk based on large genome‐wide association studies increases
CAD
risk through an increased burden of coronary atherosclerosis rather than promoting specific plaque features.
Clinical Trial Registration
URL
:
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov
. Unique identifier:
NCT
02264717.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
19 articles.
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