Yue John K, Pronger Angela M, Ferguson Adam R, Temkin Nancy R, Sharma Sourabh, Rosand Jonathan, Sorani Marco D, McAllister Thomas W, Barber Jason, Winkler Ethan A, Burchard Esteban G, Hu Donglei, Lingsma Hester F, Cooper Shelly R, Puccio Ava M, Okonkwo David O, Diaz-Arrastia Ramon, Manley Geoffrey T
Brain and Spinal Injury Center, San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Neurogenetics. 2015 Jul;16(3):169-80. doi: 10.1007/s10048-015-0437-1. Epub 2015 Jan 30.
Genetic association analyses suggest that certain common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) may adversely impact recovery from traumatic brain injury (TBI). Delineating their causal relationship may aid in development of novel interventions and in identifying patients likely to respond to targeted therapies. We examined the influence of the (C/T) SNP rs1800497 of ANKK1 on post-TBI outcome using data from two prospective multicenter studies: the Citicoline Brain Injury Treatment (COBRIT) trial and Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury Pilot (TRACK-TBI Pilot). We included patients with ANKK1 genotyping results and cognitive outcomes at six months post-TBI (n = 492: COBRIT n = 272, TRACK-TBI Pilot n = 220). Using the California Verbal Learning Test Second Edition (CVLT-II) Trial 1-5 Standard Score, we found a dose-dependent effect for the T allele, with T/T homozygotes scoring lowest on the CVLT-II Trial 1-5 Standard Score (T/T 45.1, C/T 51.1, C/C 52.1, ANOVA, p = 0.008). Post hoc testing with multiple comparison-correction indicated that T/T patients performed significantly worse than C/T and C/C patients. Similar effects were observed in a test of non-verbal processing (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Processing Speed Index). Our findings extend those of previous studies reporting a negative relationship of the ANKK1 T allele with cognitive performance after TBI. In this study, we demonstrate the value of pooling shared clinical, biomarker, and outcome variables from two large datasets applying the NIH TBI Common Data Elements. The results have implications for future multicenter investigations to further elucidate the role of ANKK1 in post-TBI outcome.
基因关联分析表明,某些常见的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)可能会对创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的恢复产生不利影响。明确它们之间的因果关系可能有助于开发新的干预措施,并识别可能对靶向治疗有反应的患者。我们使用两项前瞻性多中心研究的数据,研究了ANKK1基因的(C/T)SNP rs1800497对TBI后结果的影响:胞磷胆碱脑损伤治疗(COBRIT)试验和创伤性脑损伤转化研究与临床知识试点(TRACK-TBI试点)。我们纳入了有ANKK1基因分型结果和TBI后六个月认知结果的患者(n = 492:COBRIT n = 272,TRACK-TBI试点n = 220)。使用加利福尼亚言语学习测试第二版(CVLT-II)试验1-5标准分数,我们发现T等位基因存在剂量依赖性效应,T/T纯合子在CVLT-II试验1-5标准分数上得分最低(T/T 45.1,C/T 51.1,C/C 52.1,方差分析,p = 0.008)。经多重比较校正的事后检验表明,T/T患者的表现明显比C/T和C/C患者差。在非语言处理测试(韦氏成人智力量表,处理速度指数)中也观察到了类似的效果。我们的研究结果扩展了先前研究的发现,这些研究报告了ANKK1 T等位基因与TBI后认知表现之间的负相关关系。在本研究中,我们展示了合并来自两个大型数据集的共享临床、生物标志物和结果变量(应用美国国立卫生研究院TBI通用数据元素)的价值。这些结果对未来的多中心研究具有启示意义,以进一步阐明ANKK1在TBI后结果中的作用。