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  3. Frequency, Penetrance, and Variable Expressivity of Dilated Cardiomyopathy-Associated Putative Pathogenic Gene Variants in UK Biobank Participants.
 

Frequency, Penetrance, and Variable Expressivity of Dilated Cardiomyopathy-Associated Putative Pathogenic Gene Variants in UK Biobank Participants.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/170791
Publisher DOI
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.058143
PubMed ID
35708014
Description
BACKGROUND

There is a paucity of data regarding the phenotype of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) gene variants in the general population. We aimed to determine the frequency and penetrance of DCM-associated putative pathogenic gene variants in a general adult population, with a focus on the expression of clinical and subclinical phenotype, including structural, functional, and arrhythmic disease features.

METHODS

UK Biobank participants who had undergone whole exome sequencing, ECG, and cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging were selected for study. Three variant-calling strategies (1 primary and 2 secondary) were used to identify participants with putative pathogenic variants in 44 DCM genes. The observed phenotype was graded DCM (clinical or cardiovascular magnetic resonance diagnosis); early DCM features, including arrhythmia or conduction disease, isolated ventricular dilation, and hypokinetic nondilated cardiomyopathy; or phenotype-negative.

RESULTS

Among 18 665 individuals included in the study, 1463 (7.8%) possessed ≥1 putative pathogenic variant in 44 DCM genes by the main variant calling strategy. A clinical diagnosis of DCM was present in 0.34% and early DCM features in 5.7% of individuals with putative pathogenic variants. ECG and cardiovascular magnetic resonance analysis revealed evidence of subclinical DCM in an additional 1.6% and early DCM features in an additional 15.9% of individuals with putative pathogenic variants. Arrhythmias or conduction disease (15.2%) were the most common early DCM features, followed by hypokinetic nondilated cardiomyopathy (4%). The combined clinical/subclinical penetrance was ≤30% with all 3 variant filtering strategies. Clinical DCM was slightly more prevalent among participants with putative pathogenic variants in definitive/strong evidence genes as compared with those with variants in moderate/limited evidence genes.

CONCLUSIONS

In the UK Biobank, ≈1 of 6 of adults with putative pathogenic variants in DCM genes exhibited early DCM features potentially associated with DCM genotype, most commonly manifesting with arrhythmias in the absence of substantial ventricular dilation or dysfunction.
Date of Publication
2022-07-12
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
arrhythmias
•
cardiac cardiomyopathies death
•
sudden
•
cardiac genetic testing genetics penetrance
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Shah, Ravi A
Asatryan, Babkenorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
Dabbagh, Ghaith Sharaf
Aung, Nay
Khanji, Mohammed Y
Lopes, Luis R
van Duijvenboden, Stefan
Holmes, Anthony
Muser, Daniele
Landstrom, Andrew P
Lee, Aaron Mark
Arora, Pankaj
Semsarian, Christopher
Somers, Virend K
Owens, Anjali T
Munroe, Patricia B
Petersen, Steffen E
Chahal, C Anwar A
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
Series
Circulation
Publisher
American Heart Association
ISSN
1524-4539
Access(Rights)
open.access
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