Evaluation of polygenic score for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the general population and across clinical settings

Author:

Zheng Sean LORCID,Jurgens Sean JORCID,McGurk Kathryn AORCID,Xu Xiao,Grace Chris,Theotokis Pantazis IORCID,Buchan Rachel JORCID,Francis CatherineORCID,Marvao Antonio deORCID,Curran LaraORCID,Bai Wenjia,Pua Chee Jian,Chiaw Tang Hak,Jorda Paloma,Slegtenhorst Marjon A van,Verhagen Judith MAORCID,Harper Andrew RORCID,Ormondroyd ElizabethORCID,Chin Calvin WLORCID,Pantazis AntonisORCID,Baksi JohnORCID,Halliday Brian PORCID,Matthews PaulORCID,Pinto Yigal M,Walsh RoddyORCID,Amin Ahmad S,Wilde Arthur AM,Cook Stuart A,Prasad Sanjay K,Barton Paul JRORCID,O’Regan Declan PORCID,Lumbers RTORCID,Goel AnujORCID,Tadros RafikORCID,Michels MichelleORCID,Watkins HughORCID,Bezzina Connie RORCID,Ware James SORCID, ,

Abstract

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality, with rare pathogenic variants found in about a third of cases (sarcomere-positive). Large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS) demonstrate that common genetic variation contributes substantially to HCM risk. Here, we derive polygenic scores (PGS) from HCM GWAS, and multi-trait analysis of GWAS incorporating genetically-correlated traits, and test their performance in the UK Biobank, 100,000 Genomes Project, and across clinical cohorts. Higher PGS substantially increases population risk of HCM, particularly amongst sarcomere-positive carriers where HCM penetrance differs 10-fold between those in the highest and lowest PGS quintiles. In relatives of HCM patients, PGS stratifies risks of developing HCM and adverse outcomes. Finally, PGS strongly predicts risk of adverse outcomes in HCM, with a 4 to 6-fold increase in death between cases in the highest and lowest PGS quintiles. These findings promise broad clinical utility of PGS in the general population, in cases, and in families with HCM, enabling tailored screening and surveillance, and stratification of risk of adverse outcomes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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