Birth Weight Is Associated With Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Adulthood

Author:

Schuermans Art123ORCID,Nakao Tetsushi1245,Ruan Yunfeng12ORCID,Koyama Satoshi12ORCID,Yu Zhi12ORCID,Uddin Md Mesbah12ORCID,Haidermota Sara12,Hornsby Whitney12,Lewandowski Adam J.6ORCID,Bick Alexander G.7ORCID,Niroula Abhishek148ORCID,Jaiswal Siddhartha9ORCID,Ebert Benjamin L.410ORCID,Natarajan Pradeep1211ORCID,Honigberg Michael C.1211ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Program in Medical and Population Genetics and Cardiovascular Disease Initiative Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT Cambridge MA USA

2. Cardiovascular Research Center and Center for Genomic Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Boston MA USA

3. Department of Cardiovascular Sciences KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

4. Department of Medical Oncology Dana‐Farber Cancer Institute Boston MA USA

5. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine Brigham and Women’s Hospital Boston MA USA

6. Cardiovascular Clinical Research Facility, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine University of Oxford United Kingdom

7. Division of Genetic Medicine, Department of Medicine Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville TN USA

8. Department of Laboratory Medicine Lund University Sweden

9. Department of Pathology Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford CA USA

10. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Boston MA USA

11. Department of Medicine Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA

Abstract

Background High and low birth weight are independently associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk in adulthood. Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP), the age‐related clonal expansion of hematopoietic cells with preleukemic somatic mutations, predicts incident cardiovascular disease independent of traditional cardiovascular risk factors. Whether birth weight predicts development of CHIP later in life is unknown. Methods and Results A total of 221 047 adults enrolled in the UK Biobank with whole exome sequences and self‐reported birth weight were analyzed. Of those, 22 030 (11.5%) had low (<2.5 kg) and 29 292 (14.7%) high birth weight (>4.0 kg). CHIP prevalence was higher among participants with low (6.0%, P =0.049) and high (6.3%, P <0.001) versus normal birth weight (5.7%, ref.). Multivariable‐adjusted logistic regression analyses demonstrated that each 1‐kg increase in birth weight was associated with a 3% increased risk of CHIP (odds ratio, 1.03 [95% CI, 1.00–1.06]; P =0.04), driven by a stronger association observed between birth weight and DNMT3A CHIP (odds ratio, 1.04 per 1‐kg increase [95% CI, 1.01–1.08]; P =0.02). Mendelian randomization analyses supported a causal relationship of longer gestational age at delivery with DNMT3A CHIP. Multivariable Cox regression demonstrated that CHIP was independently and additively associated with incident cardiovascular disease or death across birth weight groups, with highest absolute risks in those with CHIP plus high or low birth weight. Conclusions Higher birth weight is associated with increased risk of developing CHIP in midlife, especially DNMT3A CHIP. These findings identify a novel risk factor for CHIP and provide insights into the relationships among early‐life environment, CHIP, cancer, and cardiovascular disease.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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