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. 2017 Apr 4;135(14):1300-1310.
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.116.023980. Epub 2017 Feb 17.

Common Genetic Variant Risk Score Is Associated With Drug-Induced QT Prolongation and Torsade de Pointes Risk: A Pilot Study

Affiliations

Common Genetic Variant Risk Score Is Associated With Drug-Induced QT Prolongation and Torsade de Pointes Risk: A Pilot Study

David G Strauss et al. Circulation. .

Abstract

Background: Drug-induced QT interval prolongation, a risk factor for life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias, is a potential side effect of many marketed and withdrawn medications. The contribution of common genetic variants previously associated with baseline QT interval to drug-induced QT prolongation and arrhythmias is not known.

Methods: We tested the hypothesis that a weighted combination of common genetic variants contributing to QT interval at baseline, identified through genome-wide association studies, can predict individual response to multiple QT-prolonging drugs. Genetic analysis of 22 subjects was performed in a secondary analysis of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial of 3 QT-prolonging drugs with 15 time-matched QT and plasma drug concentration measurements. Subjects received single doses of dofetilide, quinidine, ranolazine, and placebo. The outcome was the correlation between a genetic QT score comprising 61 common genetic variants and the slope of an individual subject's drug-induced increase in heart rate-corrected QT (QTc) versus drug concentration.

Results: The genetic QT score was correlated with drug-induced QTc prolongation. Among white subjects, genetic QT score explained 30% of the variability in response to dofetilide (r=0.55; 95% confidence interval, 0.09-0.81; P=0.02), 23% in response to quinidine (r=0.48; 95% confidence interval, -0.03 to 0.79; P=0.06), and 27% in response to ranolazine (r=0.52; 95% confidence interval, 0.05-0.80; P=0.03). Furthermore, the genetic QT score was a significant predictor of drug-induced torsade de pointes in an independent sample of 216 cases compared with 771 controls (r2=12%, P=1×10-7).

Conclusions: We demonstrate that a genetic QT score comprising 61 common genetic variants explains a significant proportion of the variability in drug-induced QT prolongation and is a significant predictor of drug-induced torsade de pointes. These findings highlight an opportunity for recent genetic discoveries to improve individualized risk-benefit assessment for pharmacological therapies. Replication of these findings in larger samples is needed to more precisely estimate variance explained and to establish the individual variants that drive these effects.

Clinical trial registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01873950.

Keywords: anti-arrhythmia agents; drug therapy; genetic testing; genetics; genomics; pharmacogenetics; torsade de pointes.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures: None of the authors has any conflicts of interest to report.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
CONSORT diagram for the study as reported in Vicente et al. Twenty four of the 52 screened subjects did not meet the inclusion criteria. Twenty two of the 28 subjects who met the inclusion criteria were randomized. All subjects completed the study, except one who withdrew prior to the last treatment period.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodyamic Response and Genetic QT Score
(A) Pharmacokinetic (PK) time profile shows plasma dofetilide concentration at each of the 15 time-points post-dose (dots) for each subject (lines). Example subjects are shown in red (dofetilide high responder) and green (low responder) throughout. (B) Pharmacodynamic (PD) time profile shows baseline- and placebo-corrected changes from baseline in heart rate corrected QT (ΔΔQTc) at 15 time-points (dots) after a single oral dose of dofetilide for each subject (lines). (C) PK/PD response plot showing the measures of ΔΔQTc from the ECGs and the corresponding time-matched dofetilide plasma concentration. Solid lines show each subject’s QTc concentration-dependent response, the slope of which was tested in genetic QT score analyses. ECG examples show lead II and QT/QTc measures of (D) a high responder subject (red line and dots in A, B and C panels) during placebo (top ECG) and dofetilide (bottom ECG) and (E) a low responder subject (green line and dots in A, B and C panels) during placebo (top ECG) and dofetilide (bottom ECG). Note that while lead II is shown, QT measurements are from the global vector magnitude lead as described in the Methods. Correlations between (F) genetic QT score vs. baseline QTc in white subjects, (G) baseline QTc vs. dofetilide QTc response in white subjects, (H) genetic QT score vs. dofetilide QTc response in white subjects and (I) dofetilide QTc response vs. quinidine QTc response in all subjects are shown. Each dot represents a subject’s value. The scale of the QT genetic score is in ms of predicted QT effect for the variants in aggregate, as described in the Methods.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Validation of genotype score in cases of drug-induced torsade de pointes
Instrumental variable analysis of effect of 60 SNPs associated with resting QTc, using effect estimates from the QT-IGC GWAS (x axis) in milliseconds of predicted QT interval per allele as a predictor of log odds ratio of drug-induced torsade de pointes (y axis). Individual labels represent SNPs used in the analysis, and error bars correspond to the standard error of the log odds ratio of drug-induced torsade de pointes. For example, the QT-raising allele of SNP rs12143842 is associated with a 3.5 ms longer QT interval (Supplementary Table 1) and a ln(OR) of 0.30, corresponding to an OR of 1.35 for torsade de pointes risk (Supplementary Table 6). The overall R-square and p value reflect the effect on torsade de pointes risk of all variants combined in the score.

Comment in

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