Conti-Ramsden Frances, de Marvao Antonio, Gill Carolyn, Chappell Lucy C, Myers Jenny, Vuckovic Dragana, Dehghan Abbas, Hysi Pirro G
Department of Women and Children's Health, School of Life Course & Population Sciences, King's College London, UK.
Department of Women and Children's Health, School of Life Course & Population Sciences, King's College London, UK; British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence, School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine and Sciences, King's College London, UK; Medical Research Council Laboratory of Medical Sciences, Imperial College London, UK.
Pregnancy Hypertens. 2024 Dec;38:101162. doi: 10.1016/j.preghy.2024.101162. Epub 2024 Oct 4.
Maternal self-reported ethnicity is recognised as a risk factor for pre-eclampsia in clinical screening tools and models. This study investigated whether ethnicity is acting as a proxy for genetic variants in this context.
A total of 436 women from multi-ethnic backgrounds recruited to two UK observational pregnancy hypertension cohort studies were genotyped. Genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were calculated for each individual through comparison to the multi-ethnic 1000 Genomes reference panel genotypes. Regression models for pre-eclampsia using clinical risk factors including self-reported ethnicity with and without ancestry estimates were built and compared using Likelihood Ratio Tests (LRT).
Pre-eclampsia (early- and late-onset).
In these multi-ethnic cohorts (mean age 34.9 years; 41.3 % White, 34.2 % Black, 13.1 % Asian ethnic backgrounds; 82.6 % chronic hypertension), discrepancies between self-reported ethnicity and genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were present in all ethnic groups, particularly minority groups. Genetically-computed pan-African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset (< 34 weeks) pre-eclampsia in adjusted models (aOR 100 % vs 0 % African ancestry: 3.81, 95 % CI 1.04-14.14, p-value 0.044) independently of self-reported ethnicity and established clinical risk factors. Addition of genetically-computed African ancestry to a clinical risk factor model including self-reported ethnicity, improved model fit (Likelihood ratio test p-value 0.023).
Self-reported maternal ethnicity is an imperfect proxy for genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates, particularly in ethnic minority groups. Genetically-computed African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset pre-eclampsia independently of self-reported maternal ethnicity. Well-powered studies in multi-ethnic cohorts are required to delineate the genetic contribution to pre-eclampsia.
在临床筛查工具和模型中,孕妇自我报告的种族被认为是子痫前期的一个风险因素。本研究调查了在这种情况下,种族是否作为遗传变异的一个替代指标。
对招募到两项英国观察性妊娠高血压队列研究中的436名来自多民族背景的女性进行基因分型。通过与多民族的千人基因组参考面板基因型进行比较,为每个个体计算遗传计算的个体祖先估计值。构建了使用包括自我报告的种族以及有无祖先估计值在内的临床风险因素的子痫前期回归模型,并使用似然比检验(LRT)进行比较。
子痫前期(早发型和晚发型)。
在这些多民族队列中(平均年龄34.9岁;41.3%为白人,34.2%为黑人,13.1%为亚洲种族背景;82.6%患有慢性高血压),所有种族群体,尤其是少数群体,自我报告的种族与遗传计算的个体祖先估计值之间存在差异。在调整模型中,遗传计算的泛非祖先百分比与早发型(<34周)子痫前期相关(非洲祖先100%与0%相比:调整后比值比3.81,95%置信区间1.04 - 14.14,p值0.044),独立于自我报告的种族和既定的临床风险因素。将遗传计算的非洲祖先添加到包括自我报告种族的临床风险因素模型中,改善了模型拟合度(似然比检验p值0.023)。
孕妇自我报告的种族是遗传计算的个体祖先估计值的一个不完美替代指标,尤其是在少数族裔群体中。遗传计算的非洲祖先百分比与早发型子痫前期相关,独立于孕妇自我报告的种族。需要在多民族队列中进行有充分效力的研究,以阐明遗传因素对子痫前期的贡献。