African American infants homozygous for the SCN5A Y1103 variant had a 24-fold increased risk for sudden infant death syndrome (OR 24.4) compared to adult controls.
Case-Control (n=1,280)
Effect estimate: OR 24.4 (95% CI 1.9-1279)
Absolute Event Rate: 2.3% vs 0.1%
p-value: p=0.005
Thousands die each year from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Neither the cause nor basis for varied prevalence in different populations is understood. While 2 cases have been associated with mutations in type Valpha, cardiac voltage-gated sodium channels (SCN5A), the "Back to Sleep" campaign has decreased SIDS prevalence, consistent with a role for environmental influences in disease pathogenesis. Here we studied SCN5A in African Americans. Three of 133 SIDS cases were homozygous for the variant S1103Y. Among controls, 120 of 1,056 were carriers of the heterozygous genotype, which was previously associated with increased risk for arrhythmia in adults. This suggests that infants with 2 copies of S1103Y have a 24-fold increased risk for SIDS. Variant Y1103 channels were found to operate normally under baseline conditions in vitro. As risk factors for SIDS include apnea and respiratory acidosis, Y1103 and wild-type channels were subjected to lowered intracellular pH. Only Y1103 channels gained abnormal function, demonstrating late reopenings suppressible by the drug mexiletine. The variant appeared to confer susceptibility to acidosis-induced arrhythmia, a gene-environment interaction. Overall, homozygous and rare heterozygous SCN5A missense variants were found in approximately 5% of cases. If our findings are replicated, prospective genetic testing of SIDS cases and screening with counseling for at-risk families warrant consideration.
Leigh D. Plant (Thu,) conducted a case-control in Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) (n=1,280). SCN5A S1103Y homozygous genotype (YY) vs. Wild-type (SS) or heterozygous (SY) genotypes was evaluated on Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) (OR 24.4, 95% CI 1.9-1279, p=0.005). African American infants homozygous for the SCN5A Y1103 variant had a 24-fold increased risk for sudden infant death syndrome (OR 24.4) compared to adult controls.