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Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype

Elevated plasma homocysteine levels are associated with stroke. However, this might be a reflection of bias or confounding because trials have failed to demonstrate an effect from homocysteine lowering in stroke patients, although a possible benefit has been suggested in lacunar stroke. Genetic stud...

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Autores principales: Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A., Traylor, Matthew, Adib-Samii, Poneh, Thijs, Vincent, Sudlow, Cathie, Rothwell, Peter M., Boncoraglio, Giorgio, Dichgans, Martin, Meschia, James, Maguire, Jane, Levi, Christopher, Rost, Natalia S., Rosand, Jonathan, Hassan, Ahamad, Bevan, Steve, Markus, Hugh S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4760380/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26839351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.011545
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author Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A.
Traylor, Matthew
Adib-Samii, Poneh
Thijs, Vincent
Sudlow, Cathie
Rothwell, Peter M.
Boncoraglio, Giorgio
Dichgans, Martin
Meschia, James
Maguire, Jane
Levi, Christopher
Rost, Natalia S.
Rosand, Jonathan
Hassan, Ahamad
Bevan, Steve
Markus, Hugh S.
author_facet Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A.
Traylor, Matthew
Adib-Samii, Poneh
Thijs, Vincent
Sudlow, Cathie
Rothwell, Peter M.
Boncoraglio, Giorgio
Dichgans, Martin
Meschia, James
Maguire, Jane
Levi, Christopher
Rost, Natalia S.
Rosand, Jonathan
Hassan, Ahamad
Bevan, Steve
Markus, Hugh S.
author_sort Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A.
collection PubMed
description Elevated plasma homocysteine levels are associated with stroke. However, this might be a reflection of bias or confounding because trials have failed to demonstrate an effect from homocysteine lowering in stroke patients, although a possible benefit has been suggested in lacunar stroke. Genetic studies could potentially overcome these issues because genetic variants are inherited randomly and are fixed at conception. Therefore, we tested the homocysteine levels–associated genetic variant MTHFR C677T for association with magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke and compared this with associations with large artery and cardioembolic stroke subtypes. METHODS—: We included 1359 magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke cases, 1824 large artery stroke cases, 1970 cardioembolic stroke cases, and 14 448 controls, all of European ancestry. Furthermore, we studied 3670 ischemic stroke patients in whom white matter hyperintensities volume was measured. We tested MTHFR C677T for association with stroke subtypes and white matter hyperintensities volume. Because of the established association of homocysteine with hypertension, we additionally stratified for hypertension status. RESULTS—: MTHFR C677T was associated with lacunar stroke (P=0.0003) and white matter hyperintensity volume (P=0.04), but not with the other stroke subtypes. Stratifying the lacunar stroke cases for hypertension status confirmed this association in hypertensive individuals (P=0.0002), but not in normotensive individuals (P=0.30). CONCLUSIONS—: MTHFR C677T was associated with magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke, but not large artery or cardioembolic stroke. The association may act through increased susceptibility to, or interaction with, high blood pressure. This heterogeneity of association might explain the lack of effect of lowering homocysteine in secondary prevention trials which included all strokes.
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spelling pubmed-47603802016-03-01 Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A. Traylor, Matthew Adib-Samii, Poneh Thijs, Vincent Sudlow, Cathie Rothwell, Peter M. Boncoraglio, Giorgio Dichgans, Martin Meschia, James Maguire, Jane Levi, Christopher Rost, Natalia S. Rosand, Jonathan Hassan, Ahamad Bevan, Steve Markus, Hugh S. Stroke Original Contributions Elevated plasma homocysteine levels are associated with stroke. However, this might be a reflection of bias or confounding because trials have failed to demonstrate an effect from homocysteine lowering in stroke patients, although a possible benefit has been suggested in lacunar stroke. Genetic studies could potentially overcome these issues because genetic variants are inherited randomly and are fixed at conception. Therefore, we tested the homocysteine levels–associated genetic variant MTHFR C677T for association with magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke and compared this with associations with large artery and cardioembolic stroke subtypes. METHODS—: We included 1359 magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke cases, 1824 large artery stroke cases, 1970 cardioembolic stroke cases, and 14 448 controls, all of European ancestry. Furthermore, we studied 3670 ischemic stroke patients in whom white matter hyperintensities volume was measured. We tested MTHFR C677T for association with stroke subtypes and white matter hyperintensities volume. Because of the established association of homocysteine with hypertension, we additionally stratified for hypertension status. RESULTS—: MTHFR C677T was associated with lacunar stroke (P=0.0003) and white matter hyperintensity volume (P=0.04), but not with the other stroke subtypes. Stratifying the lacunar stroke cases for hypertension status confirmed this association in hypertensive individuals (P=0.0002), but not in normotensive individuals (P=0.30). CONCLUSIONS—: MTHFR C677T was associated with magnetic resonance imaging–confirmed lacunar stroke, but not large artery or cardioembolic stroke. The association may act through increased susceptibility to, or interaction with, high blood pressure. This heterogeneity of association might explain the lack of effect of lowering homocysteine in secondary prevention trials which included all strokes. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2016-03 2016-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4760380/ /pubmed/26839351 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.011545 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Stroke is published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wolters Kluwer. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Contributions
Rutten-Jacobs, Loes C.A.
Traylor, Matthew
Adib-Samii, Poneh
Thijs, Vincent
Sudlow, Cathie
Rothwell, Peter M.
Boncoraglio, Giorgio
Dichgans, Martin
Meschia, James
Maguire, Jane
Levi, Christopher
Rost, Natalia S.
Rosand, Jonathan
Hassan, Ahamad
Bevan, Steve
Markus, Hugh S.
Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title_full Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title_fullStr Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title_full_unstemmed Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title_short Association of MTHFR C677T Genotype With Ischemic Stroke Is Confined to Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Subtype
title_sort association of mthfr c677t genotype with ischemic stroke is confined to cerebral small vessel disease subtype
topic Original Contributions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4760380/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26839351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.011545
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