rs10773657 - HIP1R
Magnitude 2.2 · 3 studies on file
Reported associations
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Biobank-driven genomic discovery yields new insight into atrial fibrillation biology - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 30061737
ABSTRACT: To identify genetic variation underlying atrial fibrillation, the most common cardiac arrhythmia, we performed a genome-wide association study of > 1,000,000 people, including 60,620 atrial fibrillation cases and 970,216 controls. We identified 142 independent risk variants at 111 loci and prioritized 151 functional candidate genes likely to be involved in atrial fibrillation. Many of the identified risk variants fall near genes where more deleterious mutations have been reported to cause serious heart defects in humans (GATA4, MYH6, NKX2-5, PITX2, TBX5), or near genes important for striated muscle function and integrity (for example, CFL2 MYH7, PKP2, RBM20, SGCG, SSPN). Pathway and functional enrichment analyses also suggested that many of the putative atrial fibrillation gene
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A Polygenic Risk Score Based on a Cardioembolic Stroke Multitrait Analysis Improves a Clinical Prediction Model for This Stroke Subtype - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 35872910
ABSTRACT: Background Occult atrial fibrillation (AF) is one of the major causes of embolic stroke of undetermined source (ESUS). Knowing the underlying etiology of an ESUS will reduce stroke recurrence and/or unnecessary use of anticoagulants. Understanding cardioembolic strokes (CES), whose main cause is AF, will provide tools to select patients who would benefit from anticoagulants among those with ESUS or AF. We aimed to discover novel loci associated with CES and create a polygenetic risk score (PRS) for a more efficient CES risk stratification. Methods Multitrait analysis of GWAS (MTAG) was performed with MEGASTROKE-CES cohort (n = 362,661) and AF cohort (n = 1,030,836). We considered significant variants and replicated those variants with MTAG p-value < 5 × 10−8 influencing both t
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Multi-Ethnic Genome-wide Association Study for Atrial Fibrillation - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 29892015
ABSTRACT: Atrial fibrillation (AF) affects over 33 million individuals worldwide and has a complex heritability. We conducted the largest meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for AF to date, consisting of over half a million individuals including 65,446 with AF. In total, we identified 97 loci significantly associated with AF including 67 of which were novel in a combined-ancestry analysis, and 3 in a European specific analysis. We sought to identify AF-associated genes at the GWAS loci by performing RNA-sequencing and expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analyses in 101 left atrial samples, the most relevant tissue for AF. We also performed transcriptome-wide analyses that identified 57 AF-associated genes, 42 of which overlap with GWAS loci. The identified loci implicate
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Lifestyle context
Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.
Screening
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atrial fibrillation screening strategy Moderate
rs10773657 C-allele carrier status is associated with increased atrial fibrillation risk; genetic predisposition warrants earlier or more frequent screening
discuss with physician regarding baseline ECG and periodic cardiac monitoring plan