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Donor genetic variants as risk factors for thrombosis after liver transplantation

Authors :
Werna T. Uniken Venema
Bernadien H. Jansen
Bouke G. Hepkema
Hans Blokzijl
Robert J. Porte
Ton Lisman
Henkjan J. Verkade
Rinse K. Weersma
Eleonora A. M. Festen
Yanni Li
Ranko Gacesa
Lianne M Nieuwenhuis
Shixian Hu
Michiel Voskuil
Vincent E de Meijer
Center for Liver, Digestive and Metabolic Diseases (CLDM)
Lifestyle Medicine (LM)
Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT)
Groningen Institute for Gastro Intestinal Genetics and Immunology (3GI)
Source :
American Journal of Transplantation, 21(9), 3133-3147. Wiley, American Journal of Transplantation
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Thrombosis after liver transplantation substantially impairs graft‐ and patient survival. Inevitably, heritable disorders of coagulation originating in the donor liver are transmitted by transplantation. We hypothesized that genetic variants in donor thrombophilia genes are associated with increased risk of posttransplant thrombosis. We genotyped 775 donors for adult recipients and 310 donors for pediatric recipients transplanted between 1993 and 2018. We determined the association between known donor thrombophilia gene variants and recipient posttransplant thrombosis. In addition, we performed a genome‐wide association study (GWAS) and meta‐analyzed 1085 liver transplantations. In our donor cohort, known thrombosis risk loci were not associated with posttransplant thrombosis, suggesting that it is unnecessary to exclude liver donors based on thrombosis‐susceptible polymorphisms. By performing a meta‐GWAS from children and adults, we identified 280 variants in 55 loci at suggestive genetic significance threshold. Downstream prioritization strategies identified biologically plausible candidate genes, among which were AK4 (rs11208611‐T, p = 4.22 × 10−05) which encodes a protein that regulates cellular ATP levels and concurrent activation of AMPK and mTOR, and RGS5 (rs10917696‐C, p = 2.62 × 10−05) which is involved in vascular development. We provide evidence that common genetic variants in the donor, but not previously known thrombophilia‐related variants, are associated with increased risk of thrombosis after liver transplantation.<br />A meta‐analysis of two genome‐wide association studies of adult and pediatric liver transplants identifies three common candidate risk loci in the donor, but not previously known thrombophilia‐related variants, were newly associated with increased risk of thrombosis after liver transplantation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16006135
Volume :
21
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38489276043765eb0dc65e934fdf7019