Genome-Wide Association Study of VKORC1 and CYP2C9 on acenocoumarol dose, stroke recurrence and intracranial haemorrhage in Spain

Autor/a

Cullell, Natalia

Carrera, Caty

Muiño, Elena

Torres-Aguila, Nuria-Paz

Cárcel-Márquez, Jara

González-Sánchez, Jonathan

Gallego Fabrega, Cristina

Molina, Jessica

Besora, Sarah

Sotoca, Javier

Buongiorno, Maria-Teresa

Jiménez-Conde, Jordi

Giralt-Steinhauer, Eva

de Torres-Chacón, Reyes

Montaner, Joan

Mancha, Fernando

Cabezas, Juan A.

Martí Fàbregas, Joan

Prats Sánchez, Luis

Camps Renom, Pol

Purroy Garcia, Francisco

Cambray Carner, Serafí

Freijo, María del Mar

Vives-Bauzá, Cristòfol

Tur, Silvia

Font, Maria-Àngels

López-Cancio, Elena

Hernandez-Perez, Maria

Obach, Victor

Calleja, Ana

Arenillas, Juan F.

Rodríguez-Yáñez, Manuel

Castillo, José

Sobrino, Tomas

Fernández-Cádenas, Israel

Krupinski, Jerzy

Data de publicació

2020-03-20T09:10:03Z

2020-03-20T09:10:03Z

2020



Resum

Acenocoumarol is an oral anticoagulant with significant interindividual dose variations. Variants in CYP2C9 and VKORC1 have been associated with acenocoumarol maintenance dose. We analysed whether any of the 49 polymorphisms in CYP2C9 and VKORC1 previously associated with acenocoumarol maintenance dose in a Genome-Wide Association study (GWAs) in Dutch population are associated with stroke recurrence, intracranial haemorrhage (ICH) and acenocoumarol maintenance dose in a Spanish population. We performed a GWAs using Human Core Exome-chip (Illumina) in 78 patients stroke patients treated with acenocoumarol for secondary prevention enrolled as part of the prospective investigator-initiated study (IIS) SEDMAN Study. Patients were followed-up a median of 12.8 months. Three and eight patients had recurrent stroke and ICH events, respectively. We found 14 of the 49 published variants associated with acenocoumarol maintenance dose (p < 0.05). Six polymorphisms were associated with stroke recurrence and four variants with ICH (p < 0.05). In conclusion, variants in VKORC1 and CYP2C9 are associated with acenocoumarol maintenance dose, stroke recurrence and ICH in a Spanish cohort. These results highlight the relevance of studying pharmacogenetics associated with efficacy and safety of anticoagulant drugs and justify studies with larger sample size and different ethnic populations.


We would like to thank the International Stroke Genetics Consortium, the Spanish Stroke Genetics Consortium, and the RETICS Network INVICTUS plus (RD16/0019/0001, RD16/0019/0002, RD16/0019/0007, RD16/0019/0010, and RD16/0019/0011, RD16/0019/0017, RD16/0019/0019 and RD16/0019/0021).

Tipus de document

Article
Versió publicada

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Ictus; Hemorràgia cerebral; Anticoagulants (Medicina)

Publicat per

Nature Publishing Group

Documents relacionats

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-59641-9

Scientific Reports, 2020, vol. 10, núm. 2806

Drets

cc-by, (c) Cullell et al., 2020

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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