Genetic QT Score and Sleep Apnea as Predictors of Sudden Cardiac Death in the UK Biobank.

Journal: MedRxiv : The Preprint Server For Health Sciences
Published:
Abstract

The goal of this study was to evaluate the association between a polygenic risk score (PRS) for QT prolongation (QTc-PRS), QTc intervals and mortality in patients enrolled in the UK Biobank with and without sleep apnea. The QTc-PRS was calculated using allele copy number and previously reported effect estimates for each single nuclear polymorphism SNP. Competing-risk regression models adjusting for age, sex, BMI, QT prolonging medication, race, and comorbid cardiovascular conditions were used for sudden cardiac death (SCD) analyses. 500,584 participants were evaluated (56.5 ±8 years, 54% women, 1.4% diagnosed with sleep apnea). A higher QTc-PRS was independently associated with the increased QTc interval duration (p<0.0001). The mean QTc for the top QTc-PRS quintile was 15 msec longer than the bottom quintile (p<0.001). Sleep apnea was found to be an effect modifier in the relationship between QTc-PRS and SCD. The adjusted HR per 5-unit change in QTc-PRS for SCD was 1.64 (95% CI 1.16 - 2.31, p=0.005) among those with sleep apnea and 1.04 (95% CI 0.95 - 1.14, p=0.44) among those without sleep apnea (p for interaction =0.01). Black participants with sleep apnea had significantly elevated adjusted risk of SCD compared to White participants (HR=9.6, 95% CI 1.24 - 74, p=0.03). In the UK Biobank population, the QTc-PRS was associated with SCD among participants with sleep apnea but not among those without sleep apnea, indicating that sleep apnea is a significant modifier of the genetic risk. Black participants with sleep apnea had a particularly high risk of SCD.

Authors
Amit Arora, Wojciech Zareba, Raymond Woosley, Yann Klimentidis, Imran Patel, Stuart Quan, Christopher Wendel, Fadi Shamoun, Stefano Guerra, Sairam Parthasarathy, Salma Patel
Relevant Conditions

Cardiac Arrest