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Predicting cardiac electrical response to sodium-channel blockade and Brugada syndrome using polygenic risk scores

Authors :
Hanno L. Tan
Sulayman el Mathari
Thomas Meitinger
Leander Beekman
Michael W.T. Tanck
Jan A. Kors
Ahmad S. Amin
Milena Radivojkov-Blagojevic
Rafik Tadros
Arthur A.M. Wilde
Najim Lahrouchi
Connie R. Bezzina
Pieter G. Postema
Medical Informatics
Cardiology
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Graduate School
Epidemiology and Data Science
APH - Methodology
Source :
Eur. Heart J. 40, 3097-3107 (2019), European Heart Journal, European Heart Journal, 40(37), 3097-+. Oxford University Press, European heart journal, 40(37), 3097-3107. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford Univ Press, 2019.

Abstract

Aims Sodium-channel blockers (SCBs) are associated with arrhythmia, but variability of cardiac electrical response remains unexplained. We sought to identify predictors of ajmaline-induced PR and QRS changes and Type I Brugada syndrome (BrS) electrocardiogram (ECG). Methods and results In 1368 patients that underwent ajmaline infusion for suspected BrS, we performed measurements of 26 721 ECGs, dose–response mixed modelling and genotyping. We calculated polygenic risk scores (PRS) for PR interval (PRSPR), QRS duration (PRSQRS), and Brugada syndrome (PRSBrS) derived from published genome-wide association studies and used regression analysis to identify predictors of ajmaline dose related PR change (slope) and QRS slope. We derived and validated using bootstrapping a predictive model for ajmaline-induced Type I BrS ECG. Higher PRSPR, baseline PR, and female sex are associated with more pronounced PR slope, while PRSQRS and age are positively associated with QRS slope (P Conclusion We show for the first time that genetic factors underlie the variability of cardiac electrical response to SCB. PRSBrS, family history, and a baseline ECG can predict the development of a diagnostic drug-induced Type I BrS ECG with clinically relevant accuracy. These findings could lead to the use of PRS in the diagnosis of BrS and, if confirmed in population studies, to identify patients at risk for toxicity when given SCB.

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
0195668X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Eur. Heart J. 40, 3097-3107 (2019), European Heart Journal, European Heart Journal, 40(37), 3097-+. Oxford University Press, European heart journal, 40(37), 3097-3107. Oxford University Press
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....431c348166b0a3929c4844e6a3a84788