Background: Increased heart rate and a prolonged QT interval are important risk factors for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and can be influenced by the use of various medications, including tricyclic/tetracyclic antidepressants (TCAs). We aim to identify genetic loci that modify the association between TCA use and RR and QT intervals.
Methods And Results: We conducted race/ethnic-specific genome-wide interaction analyses (with HapMap phase II imputed reference panel imputation) of TCAs and resting RR and QT intervals in cohorts of European (n=45 706; n=1417 TCA users), African (n=10 235; n=296 TCA users) and Hispanic/Latino (n=13 808; n=147 TCA users) ancestry, adjusted for clinical covariates. Among the populations of European ancestry, two genome-wide significant loci were identified for RR interval: rs6737205 in (β=56.3, p=3.9e) and rs9830388 in (β=25.2, p=1.7e). In Hispanic/Latino cohorts, rs2291477 in significantly modified the association between TCAs and QT intervals (β=9.3, p=2.55e). In the meta-analyses of the other ethnicities, these loci either were excluded from the meta-analyses (as part of quality control), or their effects did not reach the level of nominal statistical significance (p>0.05). No new variants were identified in these ethnicities. No additional loci were identified after inverse-variance-weighted meta-analysis of the three ancestries.
Conclusions: Among Europeans, TCA interactions with variants in and were identified in relation to RR intervals. Among Hispanic/Latinos, variants in modified the relation between TCAs and QT intervals. Future studies are required to confirm our results.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5406254 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104112 | DOI Listing |
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