PLoS Medicine (Jan 2021)

Polygenic risk scores in cardiovascular risk prediction: A cohort study and modelling analyses.

  • Luanluan Sun,
  • Lisa Pennells,
  • Stephen Kaptoge,
  • Christopher P Nelson,
  • Scott C Ritchie,
  • Gad Abraham,
  • Matthew Arnold,
  • Steven Bell,
  • Thomas Bolton,
  • Stephen Burgess,
  • Frank Dudbridge,
  • Qi Guo,
  • Eleni Sofianopoulou,
  • David Stevens,
  • John R Thompson,
  • Adam S Butterworth,
  • Angela Wood,
  • John Danesh,
  • Nilesh J Samani,
  • Michael Inouye,
  • Emanuele Di Angelantonio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003498
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
p. e1003498

Abstract

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BackgroundPolygenic risk scores (PRSs) can stratify populations into cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk groups. We aimed to quantify the potential advantage of adding information on PRSs to conventional risk factors in the primary prevention of CVD.Methods and findingsUsing data from UK Biobank on 306,654 individuals without a history of CVD and not on lipid-lowering treatments (mean age [SD]: 56.0 [8.0] years; females: 57%; median follow-up: 8.1 years), we calculated measures of risk discrimination and reclassification upon addition of PRSs to risk factors in a conventional risk prediction model (i.e., age, sex, systolic blood pressure, smoking status, history of diabetes, and total and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol). We then modelled the implications of initiating guideline-recommended statin therapy in a primary care setting using incidence rates from 2.1 million individuals from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink. The C-index, a measure of risk discrimination, was 0.710 (95% CI 0.703-0.717) for a CVD prediction model containing conventional risk predictors alone. Addition of information on PRSs increased the C-index by 0.012 (95% CI 0.009-0.015), and resulted in continuous net reclassification improvements of about 10% and 12% in cases and non-cases, respectively. If a PRS were assessed in the entire UK primary care population aged 40-75 years, assuming that statin therapy would be initiated in accordance with the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines (i.e., for persons with a predicted risk of ≥10% and for those with certain other risk factors, such as diabetes, irrespective of their 10-year predicted risk), then it could help prevent 1 additional CVD event for approximately every 5,750 individuals screened. By contrast, targeted assessment only among people at intermediate (i.e., 5% to ConclusionsOur results suggest that addition of PRSs to conventional risk factors can modestly enhance prediction of first-onset CVD and could translate into population health benefits if used at scale.