4.7 Article

Gender and effects of a common genetic variant in the NOS1 regulator NOS1AP on cardiac repolarization in 3761 individuals from two independent populations

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 5, Pages 1132-1141

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyn091

Keywords

cardiac repolarization; QTc; NOS1AP; gender; genetic association

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation
  2. Wellcome Trust Functional Genomics Initiative in Cardiovascular Genetics
  3. Cardiovascular Program Board of the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
  4. UK Medical Research Council Clinical Scientist
  5. MRC Clinical Training Fellowship
  6. Emil Aaltonen Foundation
  7. Medical Research Fund of Tampere University Hospital
  8. Tampere Tuberculosis Foundation
  9. MRC [G106/1216, G0501942] Funding Source: UKRI
  10. Medical Research Council [G0501942, G106/1216] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background A longer heart-rate corrected QT interval (QTc) is associated with increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias. Women have longer resting QTc and are more likely than men to develop drug-induced QT prolongation. Recent studies have shown association between resting QTc and a common variant (rs10494366) of the NOS1 regulator, NOS1AP. We investigated the association between rs10494366 in NOS1AP and QTc, and assessed gender-specific NOS1AP associations with QTc during rest and after exercise. Methods We investigated the SNP associations with resting QTc in 919 women and 918 men from 504 representative families in the UK GRAPHIC study, and with QTc at rest and at 3 min recovery after exercise in 699 women and 1225 men referred for exercise testing in the Finnish FINCAVAS study. Results In the GRAPHIC study the minor allele (G) of the NOS1AP SNP rs10494366 prolonged QTc by 4.59 ms (95% CI 2.77-6.40; P 7.63/10(7)) in women, but only by 1.62 ms (95% CI - 0.15 to 3.38; P = 0.073) in men (gender-SNP interaction term P = 0.025). In the FINCAVAS study the G allele significantly prolonged QTc in both women (P = 0.0063) and men (P = 0.0043) at 3 min recovery after exercise, but at rest an association was only seen in women (P = 0.020 excluding outliers). Conclusions A common NOS1AP variant prolongs QTc with a difference between genders. Further studies should aim to confirm this finding and to assess whether NOS1AP genotype influences the risk of drug-induced QT prolongation and risk of consequent arrhythmias.

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