PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

An assessment of prevalence of Type 1 CFI rare variants in European AMD, and why lack of broader genetic data hinders development of new treatments and healthcare access.

  • Amy V Jones,
  • Darin Curtiss,
  • Claire Harris,
  • Tom Southerington,
  • Marco Hautalahti,
  • Pauli Wihuri,
  • Johanna Mäkelä,
  • Roosa E Kallionpää,
  • Enni Makkonen,
  • Theresa Knopp,
  • Arto Mannermaa,
  • Erna Mäkinen,
  • Anne-Mari Moilanen,
  • Tongalp H Tezel,
  • SCOPE Study group,
  • Nadia K Waheed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272260
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 9
p. e0272260

Abstract

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PurposeAdvanced age-related macular degeneration (AAMD) risk is associated with rare complement Factor I (FI) genetic variants associated with low FI protein levels (termed 'Type 1'), but it is unclear how variant prevalences differ between AMD patients from different ethnicities.MethodsCollective prevalence of Type 1 CFI rare variant genotypes were examined in four European AAMD datasets. Collective minor allele frequencies (MAFs) were sourced from the natural history study SCOPE, the UK Biobank, the International AMD Genomics Consortium (IAMDGC), and the Finnish Biobank Cooperative (FINBB), and compared to paired control MAFs or background population prevalence rates from the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD). Due to a lack of available genetic data in non-European AAMD, power calculations were undertaken to estimate the AAMD population sizes required to identify statistically significant association between Type 1 CFI rare variants and disease risk in different ethnicities, using gnomAD populations as controls.ResultsType 1 CFI rare variants were enriched in all European AAMD cohorts, with odds ratios (ORs) ranging between 3.1 and 7.8, and a greater enrichment was observed in dry AMD from FINBB (OR 8.9, 95% CI 1.49-53.31). The lack of available non-European AAMD datasets prevented us exploring this relationship more globally, however a statistical association may be detectable by future sequencing studies that sample approximately 2,000 AAMD individuals from Ashkenazi Jewish and Latino/Admixed American ethnicities.ConclusionsThe relationship between Type 1 CFI rare variants increasing odds of AAMD are well established in Europeans, however the lack of broader genetic data in AAMD has adverse implications for clinical development and future commercialisation strategies of targeted FI therapies in AAMD. These findings emphasise the importance of generating more diverse genetic data in AAMD to improve equity of access to new treatments and address the bias in health care.