Kim Daniel Seung, Kim Jerry H, Burt Amber A, Crosslin David R, Burnham Nancy, Kim Cecilia E, McDonald-McGinn Donna M, Zackai Elaine H, Nicolson Susan C, Spray Thomas L, Stanaway Ian B, Nickerson Deborah A, Heagerty Patrick J, Hakonarson Hakon, Gaynor J William, Jarvik Gail P
Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash; Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash; Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2016 Apr;151(4):1147-51.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2015.09.136. Epub 2015 Nov 10.
Copy number variants (CNVs) are duplications or deletions of genomic regions. Large CNVs are potentially pathogenic and are overrepresented in children with congenital heart disease (CHD). We sought to determine the frequency of large CNVs in children with isolated CHD, and to evaluate the relationship of these potentially pathogenic CNVs with transplant-free survival.
These cases are derived from a prospective cohort of patients with nonsyndromic CHD (n = 422) identified before first surgery. Healthy pediatric controls (n = 500) were obtained from the electronic Medical Records and Genetic Epidemiology Network, and CNV frequency was contrasted for CHD cases and controls. CNVs were determined algorithmically; subsequently screened for >95% overlap between 2 methods, size (>300 kb), quality score, overlap with a gene, and novelty (absent from databases of known, benign CNVs); and separately validated by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Survival likelihoods for cases were calculated using Cox proportional hazards modeling to evaluate the joint effect of CNV burden and known confounders on transplant-free survival.
Children with nonsyndromic CHD had a higher burden of potentially pathogenic CNVs compared with pediatric controls (12.1% vs 5.0%; P = .00016). Presence of a CNV was associated with significantly decreased transplant-free survival after surgery (hazard ratio, 3.42; 95% confidence interval, 1.66-7.09; P = .00090) with confounder adjustment.
We confirm that children with isolated CHD have a greater burden of rare/large CNVs. We report a novel finding that these CNVs are associated with an adjusted 2.55-fold increased risk of death or transplant. These data suggest that CNV burden is an important modifier of survival after surgery for CHD.
拷贝数变异(CNV)是基因组区域的重复或缺失。大型CNV可能具有致病性,在先天性心脏病(CHD)儿童中过度存在。我们试图确定孤立性CHD儿童中大型CNV的频率,并评估这些潜在致病性CNV与无移植生存的关系。
这些病例来自首次手术前确定的非综合征性CHD患者的前瞻性队列(n = 422)。健康儿科对照(n = 500)从电子病历和遗传流行病学网络获得,并对CHD病例和对照的CNV频率进行对比。通过算法确定CNV;随后筛选两种方法之间>95%的重叠、大小(>300 kb)、质量评分、与基因的重叠以及新颖性(已知良性CNV数据库中不存在);并通过定量聚合酶链反应单独验证。使用Cox比例风险模型计算病例的生存可能性,以评估CNV负担和已知混杂因素对无移植生存的联合影响。
与儿科对照相比,非综合征性CHD儿童的潜在致病性CNV负担更高(12.1%对5.0%;P = .00016)。校正混杂因素后,CNV的存在与手术后无移植生存率显著降低相关(风险比,3.42;95%置信区间,1.66 - 7.09;P = .00090)。
我们证实孤立性CHD儿童有更大的罕见/大型CNV负担。我们报告了一项新发现,即这些CNV与调整后死亡或移植风险增加2.55倍相关。这些数据表明CNV负担是CHD手术后生存的重要调节因素。