4.7 Article

Genomic Association Analysis of Common Variants Influencing Antihypertensive Response to Hydrochlorothiazide

Journal

HYPERTENSION
Volume 62, Issue 2, Pages 391-397

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.00436

Keywords

antihypertensive agents; genomics; hydrochlorothiazide; hypertension; pharmacogenomics; protein kinase C

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health Pharmacogenetics Research Network [U01 GM074492]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1 TR000064, UL1 TR000454, UL1 TR000135]
  3. Mayo Foundation [HL086558, HL053330, HL074735]
  4. Pharmacia Corporation (Kalamazoo MI)
  5. British Heart Foundation (BHF) Chair [CH/98001]
  6. BHF Program [RG/07/005/23633]
  7. BHF Special Project [SP/08/005/25115]
  8. European Union Ingenious HyperCare Consortium: Integrated Genomics, Clinical Research, and Care in Hypertension grant [LSHM-C7-2006 to 037093]
  9. BHF fellowship [FS/05/095/19937, FS/10/016/28162]
  10. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  11. Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research
  12. Italian Ministry of Health [RF-FSR-2008-1141719]

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To identify novel genes influencing blood pressure response to thiazide diuretic therapy for hypertension, we conducted genome-wide association meta-analyses of approximate to 1.1 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in a combined sample of 424 European Americans with primary hypertension treated with hydrochlorothiazide from the Pharmacogenomic Evaluation of Antihypertensive Responses study (n=228) and the Genetic Epidemiology of Responses to Antihypertensive study (n=196). Polymorphisms associated with blood pressure response at P<10(-5) were tested for replication of the associations in independent samples of hydrochlorothiazide-treated European hypertensives. The rs16960228 polymorphism in protein kinase C, replicated for same-direction association with diastolic blood pressure response in the Nordic Diltiazem study (n=420) and the Genetics of Drug Responsiveness in Essential Hypertension study (n=206), and the combined 4-study meta-analysis P value achieved genome-wide significance (P=3.3x10(-8)). Systolic or diastolic blood pressure responses were consistently greater in carriers of the rs16960228 A allele than in GG homozygotes (>4/4 mm Hg) across study samples. The rs2273359 polymorphism in the GNAS-EDN3 region also replicated for same-direction association with systolic blood pressure response in the Nordic Diltiazem study, and the combined 3-study meta-analysis P value approached genome-wide significance (P=5.5x10(-8)). The findings document clinically important effects of genetic variation at novel loci on blood pressure response to a thiazide diuretic, which may be a basis for individualization of antihypertensive drug therapy and identification of new drug targets.

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