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. 2014 Jun;2(6):481-7.
doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(14)70050-6. Epub 2014 Mar 19.

Heritability of variation in glycaemic response to metformin: a genome-wide complex trait analysis

Collaborators, Affiliations

Heritability of variation in glycaemic response to metformin: a genome-wide complex trait analysis

Kaixin Zhou et al. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2014 Jun.

Abstract

Background: Metformin is a first-line oral agent used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, but glycaemic response to this drug is highly variable. Understanding the genetic contribution to metformin response might increase the possibility of personalising metformin treatment. We aimed to establish the heritability of glycaemic response to metformin using the genome-wide complex trait analysis (GCTA) method.

Methods: In this GCTA study, we obtained data about HbA1c concentrations before and during metformin treatment from patients in the Genetics of Diabetes Audit and Research in Tayside Scotland (GoDARTS) study, which includes a cohort of patients with type 2 diabetes and is linked to comprehensive clinical databases and genome-wide association study data. We applied the GCTA method to estimate heritability for four definitions of glycaemic response to metformin: absolute reduction in HbA1c; proportional reduction in HbA1c; adjusted reduction in HbA1c; and whether or not the target on-treatment HbA1c of less than 7% (53 mmol/mol) was achieved, with adjustment for baseline HbA1c and known clinical covariates. Chromosome-wise heritability estimation was used to obtain further information about the genetic architecture.

Findings: 5386 individuals were included in the final dataset, of whom 2085 had enough clinical data to define glycaemic response to metformin. The heritability of glycaemic response to metformin varied by response phenotype, with a heritability of 34% (95% CI 1-68; p=0·022) for the absolute reduction in HbA1c, adjusted for pretreatment HbA1c. Chromosome-wise heritability estimates suggest that the genetic contribution is probably from individual variants scattered across the genome, which each have a small to moderate effect, rather than from a few loci that each have a large effect.

Interpretation: Glycaemic response to metformin is heritable, thus glycaemic response to metformin is, in part, intrinsic to individual biological variation. Further genetic analysis might enable us to make better predictions for stratified medicine and to unravel new mechanisms of metformin action.

Funding: Wellcome Trust.

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Figures

Figure
Figure
Chromosome-wise heritability estimation for glycaemic response to metformin Chromosome-wise heritability plotted for whether or not the target of on-treatment HbA1c<7% (53 mmol/mol) was achieved (A), and for model-adjusted reduction in HbA1c—ie, residuals of absolute reduction adjusted by known clinical covariates (B). The circled numbers show the heritability point estimates of each chromosome (sex chromosomes were not included). The solid lines plot the linear regression of chromosome-wise heritability against chromosome length; the dotted lines show 95% CI.

Comment in

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