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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study of platelet reactivity and cardiovascular response in patients treated with clopidogrel: a study by the International Clopidogrel Pharmacogenomics Consortium (ICPC).

Verma SS, Bergmeijer TO, Gong L et al.

32472697 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2170 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

VS
Verma SS
BT
Bergmeijer TO
GL
Gong L
RJ
Reny JL
LJ
Lewis JP
MB
Mitchell BD
AD
Alexopoulos D
AD
Aradi D
AR
Altman RB
BK
Bliden K
BY
Bradford Y
CG
Campo G
CK
Chang K
CJ
Cleator JH
DJ
Déry JP
DN
Dridi NP
FI
Fernandez-Cadenas I
FP
Fontana P
GM
Gawaz M
GT
Geisler T
GG
Gensini GF
GB
Giusti B
GP
Gurbel PA
HW
Hochholzer W
HL
Holmvang L
KE
Kim EY
KH
Kim HS
MR
Marcucci R
MJ
Montaner J
BJ
Backman JD
PR
Pakyz RE
RD
Roden DM
SE
Schaeffeler E
SM
Schwab M
SJ
Shin JG
SJ
Siller-Matula JM
TB
Ten Berg JM
TD
Trenk D
VM
Valgimigli M
WJ
Wallace J
WM
Wen MS
KM
Kubo M
LM
Lee MTM
WR
Whaley R
WS
Winter S
KT
Klein TE
SA
Shuldiner AR
RM
Ritchie MD
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Antiplatelet response to clopidogrel shows wide variation, and poor response is correlated with adverse clinical outcomes. CYP2C19 loss-of-function alleles play an important role in this response, but account for only a small proportion of variability in response to clopidogrel. An aim of the International Clopidogrel Pharmacogenomics Consortium (ICPC) is to identify other genetic determinants of clopidogrel pharmacodynamics and clinical response. A genomewide association study (GWAS) was performed using DNA from 2,750 European ancestry individuals, using adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet reactivity and major cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events as outcome parameters. GWAS for platelet reactivity revealed a strong signal for CYP2C19*2 (P value = 1.67e-33). After correction for CYP2C19*2 no other single-nucleotide polymorphism reached genomewide significance. GWAS for a combined clinical end point of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke (5.0% event rate), or a combined end point of cardiovascular death or myocardial infarction (4.7% event rate) showed no significant results, although in coronary artery disease, percutaneous coronary intervention, and acute coronary syndrome subgroups, mutations in SCOS5P1, CDC42BPA, and CTRAC1 showed genomewide significance (lowest P values: 1.07e-09, 4.53e-08, and 2.60e-10, respectively). CYP2C19*2 is the strongest genetic determinant of on-clopidogrel platelet reactivity. We identified three novel associations in clinical outcome subgroups, suggestive for each of these outcomes.

102 European ancestry cases, 2,068 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2170
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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