Cargando…

Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib

Darapladib, a lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA(2)) inhibitor, failed to demonstrate efficacy for the primary endpoints in two large phase III cardiovascular outcomes trials, one in stable coronary heart disease patients (STABILITY) and one in acute coronary syndrome (SOLID-TIMI 52). N...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yeo, Astrid, Li, Li, Warren, Liling, Aponte, Jennifer, Fraser, Dana, King, Karen, Johansson, Kelley, Barnes, Allison, MacPhee, Colin, Davies, Richard, Chissoe, Stephanie, Tarka, Elizabeth, O’Donoghue, Michelle L., White, Harvey D., Wallentin, Lars, Waterworth, Dawn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5533343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28753643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182115
_version_ 1783253605803884544
author Yeo, Astrid
Li, Li
Warren, Liling
Aponte, Jennifer
Fraser, Dana
King, Karen
Johansson, Kelley
Barnes, Allison
MacPhee, Colin
Davies, Richard
Chissoe, Stephanie
Tarka, Elizabeth
O’Donoghue, Michelle L.
White, Harvey D.
Wallentin, Lars
Waterworth, Dawn
author_facet Yeo, Astrid
Li, Li
Warren, Liling
Aponte, Jennifer
Fraser, Dana
King, Karen
Johansson, Kelley
Barnes, Allison
MacPhee, Colin
Davies, Richard
Chissoe, Stephanie
Tarka, Elizabeth
O’Donoghue, Michelle L.
White, Harvey D.
Wallentin, Lars
Waterworth, Dawn
author_sort Yeo, Astrid
collection PubMed
description Darapladib, a lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA(2)) inhibitor, failed to demonstrate efficacy for the primary endpoints in two large phase III cardiovascular outcomes trials, one in stable coronary heart disease patients (STABILITY) and one in acute coronary syndrome (SOLID-TIMI 52). No major safety signals were observed but tolerability issues of diarrhea and odor were common (up to 13%). We hypothesized that genetic variants associated with Lp-PLA(2) activity may influence efficacy and tolerability and therefore performed a comprehensive pharmacogenetic analysis of both trials. We genotyped patients within the STABILITY and SOLID-TIMI 52 trials who provided a DNA sample and consent (n = 13,577 and 10,404 respectively, representing 86% and 82% of the trial participants) using genome-wide arrays with exome content and performed imputation using a 1000 Genomes reference panel. We investigated baseline and change from baseline in Lp-PLA(2) activity, two efficacy endpoints (major coronary events and myocardial infarction) as well as tolerability parameters at genome-wide and candidate gene level using a meta-analytic approach. We replicated associations of published loci on baseline Lp-PLA(2) activity (APOE, CELSR2, LPA, PLA2G7, LDLR and SCARB1) and identified three novel loci (TOMM5, FRMD5 and LPL) using the GWAS-significance threshold P≤5E-08. Review of the PLA2G7 gene (encoding Lp-PLA(2)) within these datasets identified V279F null allele carriers as well as three other rare exonic null alleles within various ethnic groups, however none of these variants nor any other loci associated with Lp-PLA(2) activity at baseline were associated with any of the drug response endpoints. The analysis of darapladib efficacy endpoints, despite low power, identified six low frequency loci with main genotype effect (though with borderline imputation scores) and one common locus (minor allele frequency 0.24) with genotype by treatment interaction effect passing the GWAS-significance threshold. This locus conferred risk in placebo subjects, hazard ratio (HR) 1.22 with 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.11–1.33, but was protective in darapladib subjects, HR 0.79 (95% CI 0.71–0.88). No major loci for tolerability were found. Thus, genetic analysis confirmed and extended the influence of lipoprotein loci on Lp-PLA(2) levels, identified some novel null alleles in the PLA2G7 gene, and only identified one potentially efficacious subgroup within these two large clinical trials.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5533343
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55333432017-08-07 Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib Yeo, Astrid Li, Li Warren, Liling Aponte, Jennifer Fraser, Dana King, Karen Johansson, Kelley Barnes, Allison MacPhee, Colin Davies, Richard Chissoe, Stephanie Tarka, Elizabeth O’Donoghue, Michelle L. White, Harvey D. Wallentin, Lars Waterworth, Dawn PLoS One Research Article Darapladib, a lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA(2)) inhibitor, failed to demonstrate efficacy for the primary endpoints in two large phase III cardiovascular outcomes trials, one in stable coronary heart disease patients (STABILITY) and one in acute coronary syndrome (SOLID-TIMI 52). No major safety signals were observed but tolerability issues of diarrhea and odor were common (up to 13%). We hypothesized that genetic variants associated with Lp-PLA(2) activity may influence efficacy and tolerability and therefore performed a comprehensive pharmacogenetic analysis of both trials. We genotyped patients within the STABILITY and SOLID-TIMI 52 trials who provided a DNA sample and consent (n = 13,577 and 10,404 respectively, representing 86% and 82% of the trial participants) using genome-wide arrays with exome content and performed imputation using a 1000 Genomes reference panel. We investigated baseline and change from baseline in Lp-PLA(2) activity, two efficacy endpoints (major coronary events and myocardial infarction) as well as tolerability parameters at genome-wide and candidate gene level using a meta-analytic approach. We replicated associations of published loci on baseline Lp-PLA(2) activity (APOE, CELSR2, LPA, PLA2G7, LDLR and SCARB1) and identified three novel loci (TOMM5, FRMD5 and LPL) using the GWAS-significance threshold P≤5E-08. Review of the PLA2G7 gene (encoding Lp-PLA(2)) within these datasets identified V279F null allele carriers as well as three other rare exonic null alleles within various ethnic groups, however none of these variants nor any other loci associated with Lp-PLA(2) activity at baseline were associated with any of the drug response endpoints. The analysis of darapladib efficacy endpoints, despite low power, identified six low frequency loci with main genotype effect (though with borderline imputation scores) and one common locus (minor allele frequency 0.24) with genotype by treatment interaction effect passing the GWAS-significance threshold. This locus conferred risk in placebo subjects, hazard ratio (HR) 1.22 with 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.11–1.33, but was protective in darapladib subjects, HR 0.79 (95% CI 0.71–0.88). No major loci for tolerability were found. Thus, genetic analysis confirmed and extended the influence of lipoprotein loci on Lp-PLA(2) levels, identified some novel null alleles in the PLA2G7 gene, and only identified one potentially efficacious subgroup within these two large clinical trials. Public Library of Science 2017-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5533343/ /pubmed/28753643 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182115 Text en © 2017 Yeo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yeo, Astrid
Li, Li
Warren, Liling
Aponte, Jennifer
Fraser, Dana
King, Karen
Johansson, Kelley
Barnes, Allison
MacPhee, Colin
Davies, Richard
Chissoe, Stephanie
Tarka, Elizabeth
O’Donoghue, Michelle L.
White, Harvey D.
Wallentin, Lars
Waterworth, Dawn
Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title_full Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title_fullStr Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title_short Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
title_sort pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of baseline risk factors, pharmacodynamic, efficacy and tolerability endpoints from two large global cardiovascular outcomes trials for darapladib
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5533343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28753643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182115
work_keys_str_mv AT yeoastrid pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT lili pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT warrenliling pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT apontejennifer pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT fraserdana pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT kingkaren pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT johanssonkelley pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT barnesallison pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT macpheecolin pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT daviesrichard pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT chissoestephanie pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT tarkaelizabeth pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT odonoghuemichellel pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT whiteharveyd pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT wallentinlars pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib
AT waterworthdawn pharmacogeneticmetaanalysisofbaselineriskfactorspharmacodynamicefficacyandtolerabilityendpointsfromtwolargeglobalcardiovascularoutcomestrialsfordarapladib