Blood Pressure (Jul 2019)

Genome-wide association study of white-coat effect in hypertensive patients

  • Jenni M Rimpelä,
  • Teemu Niiranen,
  • Antti Jula,
  • Ilkka H Pörsti,
  • Antti Tikkakoski,
  • Aki Havulinna,
  • Terho Lehtimäki,
  • Veikko Salomaa,
  • Kimmo K Kontula,
  • Timo P Hiltunen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/08037051.2019.1604066
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 4
pp. 239 – 249

Abstract

Read online

Background: White-coat effect (WCE) confounds diagnosis and treatment of hypertension. The prevalence of white-coat hypertension is higher in Europe and Asia compared to other continents suggesting that genetic factors could play a role. Methods: To study genetic variation affecting WCE, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study involving 1343 Finnish subjects. For the discovery stage, we used Genetics of Drug Responsiveness in Essential Hypertension (GENRES) cohort (n = 206), providing the mean WCE values from up to four separate office/ambulatory recordings conducted on placebo. Associations with p values <1 × 10−5 were included in the replication step in three independent cohorts: Haemodynamics in Primary and Secondary Hypertension (DYNAMIC) (n = 182), Finn-Home study (n = 773) and Dietary, Lifestyle and Genetic Determinants of Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome (DILGOM) (n = 182). Results: No single nucleotide polymorphisms reached genome-wide significance for association with either systolic or diastolic WCE. However, two loci provided suggestive evidence for association. A known coronary artery disease risk locus rs2292954 in SPG7 associated with systolic WCE (discovery p value = 2.2 × 10−6, replication p value = 0.03 in Finn-Home, meta-analysis p value 2.6 × 10−4), and rs10033652 in RASGEF1B with diastolic WCE (discovery p value = 4.9 × 10−6, replication p value = 0.04 in DILGOM, meta-analysis p value = 5.0 × 10−3). Conclusion: This study provides evidence for two novel candidate genes, SPG7 and RASGEF1B, associating with WCE. Our results need to be validated in even larger studies carried out in other populations.

Keywords