The ACE D allele was associated with significantly poorer transplant-free survival (P=0.044), an effect primarily evident in patients not treated with beta-blockers (P=0.005).
Cohort (n=328)
Does beta-blocker therapy modify the effect of the ACE deletion polymorphism on transplant-free survival in patients with congestive heart failure?
Beta-blocker therapy appears to attenuate the adverse prognostic impact of the ACE D allele on transplant-free survival in patients with systolic heart failure.
p-value: p=0.044
BACKGROUND: Activation of the renin-angiotensin and sympathetic nervous systems adversely affect heart failure progression. The ACE deletion allele (ACE D) is associated with increased renin-angiotensin activation; however, its influence on patient outcomes remains uncertain, and the pharmacogenetic interactions with beta-blocker therapy have not been previously evaluated. METHODS AND RESULTS: We prospectively followed 328 patients (age, 56.1+/-11.9 years) with systolic dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction, 0.24+/-0.08) to assess the impact of the ACE D allele on transplant-free survival (median follow-up, 21 months). Transplant-free survival was compared by genotype for the whole cohort and separately in patients with (n=120) and those without beta-blocker therapy (n=208) at the time of entry. Transplant-free survival was significantly poorer for patients with the D: allele (1-year percent survival II/ID/DD=94/77/75; 2-year=78/65/60; ordered log-rank test, P:=0.044). In patients not treated with beta-blockers, the adverse impact of ACE D allele was dramatically increased (1-year percent survival II/ID/DD=95/75/67; 2-year=81/61/48; P:=0.005). In contrast, in patients receiving beta-blocker therapy, no influence of ACE genotype on transplant-free survival was evident (1-year percent survival II/ID/DD=91/80/86; 2-year=70/71/77; P:=0.73). CONCLUSIONS: In a cohort of patients with systolic dysfunction, the ACE D allele was associated with a significantly poorer transplant-free survival. This effect was primarily evident in patients not treated with beta-blockers and was not seen in patients receiving therapy. These findings suggest a potential pharmacogenetic interaction between the ACE D/I polymorphism and therapy with beta-blockers in the determination of heart failure survival.
McNamara et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in Congestive Heart Failure (n=328). ACE D allele vs. ACE II genotype was evaluated on Transplant-free survival (p=0.044). The ACE D allele was associated with significantly poorer transplant-free survival (P=0.044), an effect primarily evident in patients not treated with beta-blockers (P=0.005).
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: