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Gene variant raises risk for aortic tear and rupture

Researchers from Yale School of Medicine and Celera Diagnostics have confirmed and extended the significance of a genetic variant that substantially increases the risk of a frequently fatal thoracic aortic dissection or full rupture. The study appears online in PLOS ONE.
Gene variant raises risk for aortic tear and rupture
© Sebastian Kaulitzki - Fotolia.com

Thoracic aortic aneurysms, or bulges in the artery wall, can develop without pain or other symptoms. If they lead to a tear - dissection - or full rupture, the patient will often die without immediate treatment. Therefore, better identification of patients at risk for aortic aneurysm and dissection is considered essential.

The research team, following up on a previous genome-wide association study by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, investigated genetic variations in a protein called FBN-1, which is essential for a strong arterial wall. After studying hundreds of patients at Yale, they confirmed what was found in the Baylor study: that one variation, known as rs2118181, put patients at significantly increased risk of aortic tear and rupture. In addition, the Yale team was able to show that this increased risk of tear was powerful enough to be significant even independently of aortic size.

"Although surgical therapy is remarkable and effective, it is incumbent on us to move to a higher genetic level of understanding of these diseases," said senior author Dr. John Elefteriades, the William W. L. Glenn Professor of Surgery (Section of Cardiac Surgery) at Yale School of Medicine, and director of the Aortic Institute at Yale-New Haven Hospital. "Such studies represent important steps along that path."

The researchers hope their confirmation of the earlier study may help lead to better clinical care of patients who may be at high risk of this fatal condition. "Patients with this mutation may merit earlier surgical therapy, before aortic dissection has a chance to occur," Elefteriades says. Yale cardiothoracic surgeons will now begin assessing this gene in clinical patients with aneurysm disease.

The Yale-New Haven Hospital Aortic Institute opens April 22. It will specialize in clinical care, basic science, and clinical research in aortic disease.

First author is Olga Iakoubova of Celera Diagnostics. Other authors are Carmen Tong, Charles Rowland, May Luke, Veronica Garcia, and Joseph Catanese of Celera Diagnostics; Remo Moomiaie and Maryann Tranquilli of Yale; P. Sotonyi and G. Ascady of Semmelweis University; and D. Nikas of Athens Medical Center; and P. Dedelias of Evangelismos Hospital in Athens.

The study was supported by a grant from Celera Diagnostics.

DOI: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091437

Source: Yale University

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