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A genome-wide association study suggests correlations of common genetic variants with peritoneal solute transfer rates in patients with kidney failure receiving peritoneal dialysis

Authors :
Rajnish Mehrotra
Ian B. Stanaway
Gail P. Jarvik
Mark Lambie
Johann Morelle
Jeffrey Perl
Jonathan Himmelfarb
Olof Heimburger
David W. Johnson
Talha H. Imam
Bruce Robinson
Peter Stenvinkel
Olivier Devuyst
Simon J. Davies
Ronald Pisoni
David Johnson
Yeoungjee Cho
Muh Geot Wong
Amanda Mather
Bruce Cooper
Eric Goffin
Bert Bammens
Philippe Bovy
Peter Margetts
Paul Taylor
Arsh Jain
Vanita Jassal
Ying Kuan
Camille Harron
Indranil Dasgupta
John Stoves
Habib Akbani
Sumith Abeygunasekara
Edward Sharples
Paul Mead
Amer Hayat
Neal Morgan
Hilary Cramp
Susan Robertson
Richard Fielding
Edwina Brown
Helen Collinson
Pravene Ande
Tim Doulton
Iain MacDougall
Hugh Cairns
Enric Vilar
Anand Vardhan
James Chess
Kanwaljit Sandhu
Martin Wilkie
Gavin McHaffie
Robert Lewis
Lavanya Kamesh
Kate Buck
Robert Peel
Jo Taylor
Paul Johnston
Janson Leung
Coralie Bingham
Hameed Anijeet
Ramzana Asghar
Satish Ranakrishna
Sunita Nair
Neil Iggo
David Lewis
Uday Udayaraj
Susan Dawson
Graham Woordrow
Thangavelu Chandrasekar
Rizwan Hamer
Jonathan Barratt
Richard Baines
Simon Davies
Kieron Donovan
Colin Jones
Christina Ynares
Carl Dukes
Kristin Corapi
Sagar Nigwekar
Osman Khawar
Daniel Weiner
Wei Ling Lau
Kevin Harley
Arshia Ghaffari
Ramesh Saxena
Josephine Abraham
Kerri L. Cavanaugh
Thomas A. Golper
John M. Burkart
James L. Pirkle
Brent Miller
Judy Jang
Jeffrey Turner
UCL - SSS/IREC/NEFR - Pôle de Néphrologie
UCL - (SLuc) Service de néphrologie
Source :
Kidney Int, Kidney international, p. 100(5):1101-1111 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Movement of solutes across the peritoneum allows for the use of peritoneal dialysis to treat kidney failure. However, there is a large inter-individual variability in the peritoneal solute transfer rate (PSTR). Here, we tested the hypothesis that common genetic variants are associated with variability in PSTR. Of the 3561 participants from 69 centers in six countries, 2850 with complete data were included in a genome-wide association study. PSTR was defined as the four-hour dialysate/plasma creatinine ratio from the first peritoneal equilibration test after starting PD. Heritability of PSTR was estimated using genomic-restricted maximum-likelihood analysis, and the association of PSTR with a genome-wide polygenic risk score was also tested. The mean four-hour dialysate/plasma creatinine ratio in participants was 0.70. In 2212 participants of European ancestry, no signal reached genome-wide significance but 23 single nucleotide variants at four loci demonstrated suggestive associations with PSTR. Meta-analysis of ancestry-stratified regressions in 2850 participants revealed five single-nucleotide variants at four loci with suggestive correlations with PSTR. Association across ancestry strata was consistent for rs28644184 at the KDM2B locus. The estimated heritability of PSTR was 19%, and a permuted model polygenic risk score was significantly associated with PSTR. Thus, this genome-wide association study of patients receiving peritoneal dialysis bolsters evidence for a genetic contribution to inter-individual variability in PSTR.

Details

ISSN :
15231755
Volume :
100
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney international
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....49446248e33ddf5e8319376094c6f42e