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De Novo Damaging Variants, Clinical Phenotypes, and Post-Operative Outcomes in Congenital Heart Disease

Authors :
Bruce D. Gelb
Elizabeth Goldmuntz
Jane W. Newburger
J. William Gaynor
Lynn A. Sleeper
Daniel Bernstein
Angela Romano-Adesman
Martina Brueckner
Martin Tristani-Firouzi
Jonathan R. Kaltman
David B. Meyer
Marko T. Boskovski
Michael F. Swartz
John E. Mayer
Emile A. Bacha
George M. Alfieris
Joshua M. Gorham
Richard P. Lifton
Jason Homsy
Christine E. Seidman
Meena Nathan
Wendy K. Chung
Khanh Nguyen
Jonathan G. Seidman
Matthew J. Lewis
Deepak Srivastava
Amy E. Roberts
Sarah U. Morton
George A. Porter
Angela Tai
Kathryn B. Manheimer
Richard W. Kim
Mohsen Karimi
Source :
Circulation. Genomic and Precision Medicine, Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine, vol 13, iss 4
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.<br />Background: De novo genic and copy number variants are enriched in patients with congenital heart disease, particularly those with extra-cardiac anomalies. The impact of de novo damaging variants on outcomes following cardiac repair is unknown. Methods: We studied 2517 patients with congenital heart disease who had undergone whole-exome sequencing as part of the CHD GENES study (Congenital Heart Disease Genetic Network). Results: Two hundred ninety-four patients (11.7%) had clinically significant de novo variants. Patients with de novo damaging variants were 2.4 times more likely to have extra-cardiac anomalies (P=5.63×10−12). In 1268 patients (50.4%) who had surgical data available and underwent open-heart surgery exclusive of heart transplantation as their first operation, we analyzed transplant-free survival following the first operation. Median follow-up was 2.65 years. De novo variants were associated with worse transplant-free survival (hazard ratio, 3.51; P=5.33×10−04) and longer times to final extubation (hazard ratio, 0.74; P=0.005). As de novo variants had a significant interaction with extra-cardiac anomalies for transplant-free survival (P=0.003), de novo variants conveyed no additional risk for transplant-free survival for patients with these anomalies (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.96; P=0.06). By contrast, de novo variants in patients without extra-cardiac anomalies were associated with worse transplant-free survival during follow-up (hazard ratio, 11.21; P=1.61×10−05) than that of patients with no de novo variants. Using agnostic machine-learning algorithms, we identified de novo copy number variants at 15q25.2 and 15q11.2 as being associated with worse transplant-free survival and 15q25.2, 22q11.21, and 3p25.2 as being associated with prolonged time to final extubation. Conclusions: In patients with congenital heart disease undergoing open-heart surgery, de novo variants were associated with worse transplant-free survival and longer times on the ventilator. De novo variants were most strongly associated with adverse outcomes among patients without extra-cardiac anomalies, suggesting a benefit for preoperative genetic testing even when genetic abnormalities are not suspected during routine clinical practice. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01196182.

Details

ISSN :
25748300
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....921b6b4e29c23d3a3ee57c86891de380