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Molecular Genetic Screening in Patients With ACE Inhibitor/ Angiotensin Receptor Blocker-Induced Angioedema to Explore the Role of Hereditary Angioedema Genes.

Authors :
Mathey, Carina M.
Maj, Carlo
Scheer, Annika B.
Fazaal, Julia
Wedi, Bettina
Wieczorek, Dorothea
Amann, Philipp M.
Löffler, Harald
Koch, Lukas
Schöffl, Clemens
Dickel, Heinrich
Ganjuur, Nomun
Hornung, Thorsten
Forkel, Susann
Greve, Jens
Wurpts, Gerda
Hallberg, Pär
Bygum, Anette
Buchwald, Christian Von
Karawajczyk, Malgorzata
Source :
Frontiers in Genetics; 7/18/2022, Vol. 13, p1-11, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Angioedema is a relatively rare but potentially life-threatening adverse reaction to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs). As with hereditary forms of angioedema (HAE), this adverse reaction is mediated by bradykinin. Research suggests that ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema has a multifactorial etiology. In addition, recent case reports suggest that some ACEi/ARBinduced angioedema patients may carry pathogenic HAE variants. The aim of the present study was to investigate the possible association between ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema and HAE genes via systematic molecular genetic screening in a large cohort of ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema cases. Targeted re-sequencing of five HAEassociated genes (SERPING1, F12, PLG, ANGPT1, and KNG1) was performed in 212 ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema patients recruited in Germany/Austria, Sweden, and Denmark, and in 352 controls from a German cohort. Among patients, none of the identified variants represented a known pathogenic variant for HAE. Moreover, no significant association with ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema was found for any of the identified common [minor allele frequency (MAF) >5%] or rare (MAF < 5%) variants. However, several non-significant trends suggestive of possible protective effects were observed. The lowest p-value for an individual variant was found in PLG (rs4252129, p.R523W, p = 0.057, p.adjust > 0.999, Fisher’s exact test). Variant p.R523W was found exclusively in controls and has previously been associated with decreased levels of plasminogen, a precursor of plasmin which is part of a pathway directly involved in bradykinin production. In addition, rare, potentially functional variants (MAF < 5%, Phredscaled combined annotation dependent depletion score >10) showed a nominally significant enrichment in controls both: 1) across all five genes; and 2) in the F12 gene alone. However, these results did not withstand correction for multiple testing. In conclusion, our results suggest that HAE-associated mutations are, at best, a rare cause of ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema. Furthermore, we were unable to identify a significant association between ACEi/ARB-induced angioedema and other variants in the investigated genes. Further studies with larger sample sizes are warranted to draw more definite conclusions concerning variants with limited effect sizes, including protective variants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16648021
Volume :
13
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159672542
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.914376