4.7 Review

Epigenetics and precision medicine in cardiovascular patients: from basic concepts to the clinical arena

Journal

EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL
Volume 39, Issue 47, Pages 4150-+

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx568

Keywords

Epigenetics; Precision medicine; Cardiovascular disease; Biomarkers; Non-coding RNAs; Chromatin modifications; Cardiovascular risk; Epigenetic reprogramming

Funding

  1. Sheikh Khalifa's Foundation Assistant Professorship in Cardiovascular Regenerative Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Zurich
  2. Foundation for Cardiovascular Research (Zurich Heart House, Zurich Switzerland)
  3. University of Zurich
  4. Jubilaumsstiftung der Schweizerischen
  5. Holcim Foundation
  6. U.S. National Institutes of Health [RO1 HL080472]
  7. RRM Charitable Fund
  8. US National Institutes of Health [HL091983, HL126186]
  9. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) program grant [1070386, APP0526681]
  10. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1070386] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the leading cause of mortality worldwide and also inflict major burdens on morbidity, quality of life, and societal costs. Considering that CVD preventive medications improve vascular outcomes in less than half of patients (often relative risk reductions range from 12% to 20% compared with placebo), precision medicine offers an attractive approach to refine the targeting of CVD medications to responsive individuals in a population and thus allocate resources more wisely and effectively. New tools furnished by advances in basic science and translational medicine could help achieve this goal. This approach could reach beyond the practitioners 'eyeball' assessment or venerable markers derived from the physical examination and standard laboratory evaluation. Advances in genetics have identified novel pathways and targets that operate in numerous diseases, paving the way for 'precision medicine'. Yet the inherited genome determines only part of an individual's risk profile. Indeed, standard genomic approaches do not take into account the world of regulation of gene expression by modifications of the 'epi'genome. Epigenetic modifications defined as 'heritable changes to the genome that do not involve changes in DNA sequence' have emerged as a new layer of biological regulation in CVD and could advance individualized risk assessment as well as devising and deploying tailored therapies. This review, therefore, aims to acquaint the cardiovascular community with the rapidly advancing and evolving field of epigenetics and its implications in cardiovascular precision medicine.

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