Literature DB >> 26283040

Genetic predisposition to higher blood pressure increases risk of incident hypertension and cardiovascular diseases in Chinese.

Xiangfeng Lu1, Jianfeng Huang1, Laiyuan Wang1, Shufeng Chen1, Xueli Yang1, Jianxin Li1, Jie Cao1, Jichun Chen1, Ying Li1, Liancheng Zhao1, Hongfan Li1, Fangcao Liu1, Chen Huang1, Chong Shen1, Jinjin Shen1, Ling Yu1, Lihua Xu1, Jianjun Mu1, Xianping Wu1, Xu Ji1, Dongshuang Guo1, Zhengyuan Zhou1, Zili Yang1, Renping Wang1, Jun Yang1, Weili Yan1, Dongfeng Gu2.   

Abstract

Although multiple genetic markers associated with blood pressure have been identified by genome-wide association studies, their aggregate effect on risk of incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease is uncertain, particularly among East Asian who may have different genetic and environmental exposures from Europeans. We aimed to examine the association between genetic predisposition to higher blood pressure and risk of incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease in 26 262 individuals in 2 Chinese population-based prospective cohorts. A genetic risk score was calculated based on 22 established variants for blood pressure in East Asian. We found the genetic risk score was significantly and independently associated with linear increases in blood pressure and risk of incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease (P range from 4.57×10(-3) to 3.10×10(-6)). In analyses adjusted for traditional risk factors including blood pressure, individuals carrying most blood pressure-related risk alleles (top quintile of genetic score distribution) had 40% (95% confidence interval, 18-66) and 26% (6-45) increased risk for incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease, respectively, when compared with individuals in the bottom quintile. The genetic risk score also significantly improved discrimination for incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease and led to modest improvements in risk reclassification for cardiovascular disease (all the P<0.05). Our data indicate that genetic predisposition to higher blood pressure is an independent risk factor for blood pressure increase and incident hypertension and cardiovascular disease and provides modest incremental information to cardiovascular disease risk prediction. The potential clinical use of this panel of blood pressure-associated polymorphisms remains to be determined.
© 2015 American Heart Association, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  blood pressure; cardiovascular diseases; genetic markers; hypertension; incidence

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26283040     DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.115.05961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


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