- Irvin, Marguerite R;
- Sitlani, Colleen M;
- Floyd, James S;
- Psaty, Bruce M;
- Bis, Joshua C;
- Wiggins, Kerri L;
- Whitsel, Eric A;
- Sturmer, Til;
- Stewart, James;
- Raffield, Laura;
- Sun, Fangui;
- Liu, Ching-Ti;
- Xu, Hanfei;
- Cupples, Adrienne L;
- Tanner, Rikki M;
- Rossing, Peter;
- Smith, Albert;
- Zilhão, Nuno R;
- Launer, Lenore J;
- Noordam, Raymond;
- Rotter, Jerome I;
- Yao, Jie;
- Li, Xiaohui;
- Guo, Xiuqing;
- Limdi, Nita;
- Sundaresan, Aishwarya;
- Lange, Leslie;
- Correa, Adolfo;
- Stott, David J;
- Ford, Ian;
- Jukema, J Wouter;
- Gudnason, Vilmundur;
- Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O;
- Trompet, Stella;
- Palmas, Walter;
- Warren, Helen R;
- Hellwege, Jacklyn N;
- Giri, Ayush;
- O'donnell, Christopher;
- Hung, Adriana M;
- Edwards, Todd L;
- Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S;
- Arnett, Donna K;
- Avery, Christy L
Background
Only a handful of genetic discovery efforts in apparent treatment-resistant hypertension (aTRH) have been described.Methods
We conducted a case-control genome-wide association study of aTRH among persons treated for hypertension, using data from 10 cohorts of European ancestry (EA) and 5 cohorts of African ancestry (AA). Cases were treated with 3 different antihypertensive medication classes and had blood pressure (BP) above goal (systolic BP ≥ 140 mm Hg and/or diastolic BP ≥ 90 mm Hg) or 4 or more medication classes regardless of BP control (nEA = 931, nAA = 228). Both a normotensive control group and a treatment-responsive control group were considered in separate analyses. Normotensive controls were untreated (nEA = 14,210, nAA = 2,480) and had systolic BP/diastolic BP < 140/90 mm Hg. Treatment-responsive controls (nEA = 5,266, nAA = 1,817) had BP at goal (<140/90 mm Hg), while treated with one antihypertensive medication class. Individual cohorts used logistic regression with adjustment for age, sex, study site, and principal components for ancestry to examine the association of single-nucleotide polymorphisms with case-control status. Inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analyses were carried out using METAL.Results
The known hypertension locus, CASZ1, was a top finding among EAs (P = 1.1 × 10-8) and in the race-combined analysis (P = 1.5 × 10-9) using the normotensive control group (rs12046278, odds ratio = 0.71 (95% confidence interval: 0.6-0.8)). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in this locus were robustly replicated in the Million Veterans Program (MVP) study in consideration of a treatment-responsive control group. There were no statistically significant findings for the discovery analyses including treatment-responsive controls.Conclusion
This genomic discovery effort for aTRH identified CASZ1 as an aTRH risk locus.