Association of Genome-Wide Variation With the Risk of Incident Heart Failure in Adults of European and African Ancestry A Prospective Meta-Analysis From the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium

  • Smith, NL
  • Felix, Janine
  • Morrison, AC
  • Demissie, S
  • Glazer, NL
  • Loehr, LR
  • Cupples, LA
  • Dehghan, Abbas
  • Lumley, T
  • Rosamond, WD
  • Lieb, W
  • Rivadeneira, Fernando
  • Bis, JC
  • Folsom, AR
  • Benjamin, E
  • Aulchenko, YS
  • Haritunians, T
  • Couper, D
  • Murabito, J
  • Wang, YA
  • Stricker, Bruno
  • Gottdiener, JS
  • Chang, PP
  • Wang, TJ
  • Rice, KM
  • Hofman, Bert
  • Heckbert, SR
  • Fox, ER
  • O'Donnell, CJ
  • Uitterlinden, André
  • Rotter, JI
  • Willerson, JT
  • Levy, D
  • Duijn, Cornelia
  • Psaty, BM
  • Witteman, JCM
  • Boerwinkle, E
  • Vasan, RS
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Publication date
January 2010
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Abstract

Background-Although genetic factors contribute to the onset of heart failure (HF), no large-scale genome-wide investigation of HF risk has been published to date. We have investigated the association of 2 478 304 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with incident HF by meta-analyzing data from 4 community-based prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study. Methods and Results-Eligible participants for these analyses were of European or African ancestry and free of clinical HF at baseline. Each study independently conducted genome-wide scans and imputed data to the approximate to 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in HapMap. Within...

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