Marginal role for 53 common genetic variants in cardiovascular disease prediction.

Richard W Morris; Jackie A Cooper; Tina Shah; Andrew Wong; Fotios Drenos; Jorgen Engmann; Stela McLachlan; Barbara Jefferis; Caroline Dale; Rebecca Hardy; +13 more... Diana Kuh; Yoav Ben-Shlomo; S Goya Wannamethee; Peter H Whincup; Juan-Pablo Casas; Mika Kivimaki; Meena Kumari; Philippa J Talmud; Jacqueline F Price; Frank Dudbridge ORCID logo; Aroon D Hingorani; Steve E Humphries; UCLEB Consortium; (2016) Marginal role for 53 common genetic variants in cardiovascular disease prediction. Heart (British Cardiac Society), 102 (20). pp. 1640-1647. ISSN 1355-6037 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2016-309298
Copy

OBJECTIVE: We investigated discrimination and calibration of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk scores when genotypic was added to phenotypic information. The potential of genetic information for those at intermediate risk by a phenotype-based risk score was assessed. METHODS: Data were from seven prospective studies including 11 851 individuals initially free of CVD or diabetes, with 1444 incident CVD events over 10 years' follow-up. We calculated a score from 53 CVD-related single nucleotide polymorphisms and an established CVD risk equation 'QRISK-2' comprising phenotypic measures. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), detection rate for given false-positive rate (FPR) and net reclassification improvement (NRI) index were estimated for gene scores alone and in addition to the QRISK-2 CVD risk score. We also evaluated use of genetic information only for those at intermediate risk according to QRISK-2. RESULTS: The AUROC was 0.635 for QRISK-2 alone and 0.623 with addition of the gene score. The detection rate for 5% FPR improved from 11.9% to 12.0% when the gene score was added. For a 10-year CVD risk cut-off point of 10%, the NRI was 0.25% when the gene score was added to QRISK-2. Applying the genetic risk score only to those with QRISK-2 risk of 10%-<20% and prescribing statins where risk exceeded 20% suggested that genetic information could prevent one additional event for every 462 people screened. CONCLUSION: The gene score produced minimal incremental population-wide utility over phenotypic risk prediction of CVD. Tailored prediction using genetic information for those at intermediate risk may have clinical utility.


description
CVD predic revision240516_clean.docx
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

Download

Accepted Version


Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads