Literature DB >> 20160192

Context-dependent associations between variation in risk of ischemic heart disease and variation in the 5' promoter region of the apolipoprotein E gene in Danish women.

Jari H Stengård1, Greg Dyson, Ruth Frikke-Schmidt, Anne Tybjaerg-Hansen, Borge G Nordestgaard, Charles F Sing.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Variations in the noncoding single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at positions 560 and 832 in the 5' promoter region of the apolipoprotein E gene define genotypes that distinguish between high and low concentrations of plasma total and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides. We addressed whether these genotypes improve the prediction of ischemic heart disease (IHD) in subsamples of individuals defined by traditional risk factors and the genotypes defined by the epsilon(2), epsilon(3), and epsilon(4) alleles in exon 4 of the apolipoprotein E gene. METHODS AND
RESULTS: In a sample of 3686 female and 2772 male participants of the Copenhagen City Heart Study who were free of IHD events, 576 individuals (257 women, 7.0% and 319 men, 11.5%) were diagnosed as having developed IHD in 6.5 years of follow-up. Using a stepwise Patient Rule-Induction Method modeling strategy that acknowledges the complex pathobiology of IHD, we identified a subsample of 764 elderly women (> or =65 years) with hypertriglyceridemia who had a history of smoking, a history of hypertension, or a history of both in which the A(560)T(832)/A(560)T(832) and A(560)T(832)/A(560)G(832) 5' 2-SNP genotypes had a higher cumulative incidence of IHD (172/1000) compared to the incidence of 70/1000 in the total sample of women.
CONCLUSIONS: Our study validates that 5' apolipoprotein E genotypes improve the prediction of IHD and documents that the improvement is greatest in a subset defined by a particular combination of traditional risk factors in Copenhagen City Heart Study female participants. We discuss the use of these genotypes in medical risk assessment of IHD in the population represented by the Copenhagen City Heart Study.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20160192      PMCID: PMC2851145          DOI: 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.109.862748

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Cardiovasc Genet        ISSN: 1942-3268


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