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Importance of Clinical, Laboratory, and Genetic Risk Factors for Incident CAD

Authors
 Bhattacharya, Romit  ;  Marnell, Christopher S.  ;  Cho, So Mi Jemma  ;  Patel, Aniruddh P.  ;  Ruan, Yunfeng  ;  Koyama, Satoshi  ;  Jowell, Amanda R.  ;  Trinder, Mark  ;  Haidermota, Sara  ;  Lannery, Kim  ;  Honigberg, Michael C.  ;  Zekevat, Seyedeh M.  ;  Surakka, Ida  ;  Peloso, Gina M.  ;  Natarajan, Pradeep 
Citation
 CIRCULATION-GENOMIC AND PRECISION MEDICINE, v.18, no.4 
Article Number
 e004937 
Journal Title
 CIRCULATION-GENOMIC AND PRECISION MEDICINE 
ISSN
 2574-8300 
Issue Date
2025-08
MeSH
Aged ; Coronary Artery Disease* / epidemiology ; Coronary Artery Disease* / genetics ; Female ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Heart Disease Risk Factors ; Humans ; Hypertension ; Incidence ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Multifactorial Inheritance ; Myocardial Infarction / epidemiology ; Myocardial Infarction / genetics ; Proportional Hazards Models ; Risk Factors ; United Kingdom / epidemiology
Keywords
dyslipidemias ; genetic risk score ; heart disease risk factors ; hypertension ; myocardial infarction ; primary prevention
Abstract
BACKGROUND:Prior work suggests modifiable cardiovascular risk factors (CRFs) account for 80% to 90% of the risk for incident myocardial infarction. The contributions of genetic and other novel CRFs have not been simultaneously assessed in contemporary data sets.METHODS:In the United Kingdom Biobank, CRFs were identified and Cox proportional hazards models with traditional CRFs (hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, waist-to-hip ratio, diet, exercise, alcohol, and socioeconomic deprivation) and contemporary/genetic CRFs (Lp(a) [lipoprotein(a)], hsCRP [high-sensitivity C-reactive protein], familial hypercholesterolemia variants, and polygenic risk score for coronary artery disease) were constructed for coronary artery disease. Coronary artery disease was defined as a first-time myocardial infarction diagnosis or coronary revascularization. R2 was calculated for each model, and the percent contribution of each individual CRF was calculated by the R2 percent decrease after its removal.RESULTS:Among 299 707 individuals, the mean (SD) age was 56.2 (8.1) years, and 166 533 (55.6%) were women. Over a median (interquartile range) follow-up of 11.0 (9.6-12.5) years, 17 409 (5.8%) of participants developed myocardial infarction. R2 increased from the base model (R2, 0.021 [0.020-0.022]), to the clinical model (R2, 0.045 [0.043-0.046]), to the contemporary/genetic model (R2, 0.053 [0.052-0.055]). The most powerful individual CRFs were hypertension (R2 loss, 15.2% [14.5-17.1]) and polygenic risk score for coronary artery disease (R2 loss, 12.4% [10.8-13.3]), followed by dyslipidemia (R2 loss, 3.4% [2.6-3.5]), diabetes (R2 loss, 2.2% [1.5-2.0]), hsCRP (R2 loss, 1.8% [1.5-2.0]), and Lp(a) (R2 loss, 1.5% [1.2-1.8]).CONCLUSIONS:Novel CRFs like polygenic risk score for coronary artery disease, hsCRP, and Lp(a) have similar importance, comparable to traditional CRFs such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, for incident myocardial infarction, highlighting important identifiable residual risk factors.
Full Text
https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCGEN.124.004937
DOI
10.1161/CIRCGEN.124.004937
Appears in Collections:
7. Others (기타) > Others (기타) > 1. Journal Papers
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/207799
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