Abstract

Chlorthalidone (CTD) is more potent than hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) in reducing blood pressure (BP) in hypertensive patients, though both are plagued with BP response variability. However, there is a void in the literature regarding the genetic determinants contributing to the variability observed in BP response to CTD. We performed a discovery genome wide association analysis of BP response post CTD treatment in African Americans (AA) and European Americans (EA) from the Pharmacogenomic Evaluation of Antihypertensive Responses-2 (PEAR-2) study and replication in an independent cohort of AA and EA treated with HCTZ from the PEAR study, followed by a race specific meta-analysis of the two studies. Successfully replicated SNPs were further validated in beta-blocker treated participants from PEAR-2 and PEAR for opposite direction of association. The replicated and validated signals were further evaluated by protein-protein interaction network analysis. An intronic SNP rs79237970 in the WDR92 (eQTL for PPP3R1) was significantly associated with better DBP response to CTD (p = 5.76 × 10−6, β = −15.75) in the AA cohort. This SNP further replicated in PEAR (p = 0.00046, β = −9.815) with a genome wide significant meta-analysis p-value of 8.49 × 10−9. This variant was further validated for opposite association in two β-blockers treated cohorts from PEAR-2 metoprolol (p = 9.9 × 10−3, β = 7.47) and PEAR atenolol (p = 0.04, β = 4.36) for association with DBP. Studies have implicated WDR92 in coronary artery damage. PPP3R1 is the regulatory subunit of the calcineurin complex. Use of calcineurin inhibitors is associated with HTN. Studies have also shown polymorphisms in PPP3R1 to be associated with ventricular hypertrophy in AA hypertensive patients. Protein-protein interaction analysis further identified important hypertension related pathways such as inositol phosphate-mediated signaling and calcineurin-NFAT signaling cascade as important biological process associated with PPP3R1 which further strengthen the potential importance of this signal. These data collectively suggest that WDR92 and PPP3R1 are novel candidates that may help explain the genetic underpinnings of BP response of thiazide and thiazide-like diuretics and help identify the patients better suited for thiazide and thiazide-like diuretics compared to β-blockers for improved BP management. This may further help advance personalized approaches to antihypertensive therapy.

Highlights

  • Thiazides and thiazide-like diuretics remain a recommended first line therapy for treating uncomplicated hypertension[1,2]

  • CTD is a more potent antihypertensive compared to HCTZ, which explains DBP and SBP responses being significantly higher for the CTD group compared to HCTZ for both European and African American race groups

  • Even though a head to head comparison has not been made, clinical trial data collectively suggest CTD might be superior to HCTZ for blood pressure (BP) management and associated with better outcomes[7]

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Summary

Introduction

Thiazides and thiazide-like diuretics remain a recommended first line therapy for treating uncomplicated hypertension[1,2]. There are distinct differences between the pharmacokinetic profiles of the two drugs as well with CTD being more potent and having a longer duration of action as compared to HCTZ8,9. There is a paucity of literature regarding the effect of genetics on the variability observed in CTD BP response To this end, we undertook a multi-stage genome wide analysis approach (Fig. 1) to identify the genetic underpinnings of the CTD BP response. We undertook a multi-stage genome wide analysis approach (Fig. 1) to identify the genetic underpinnings of the CTD BP response To our knowledge, this is the first genome wide association study undertaken to identify the pharmacogenomic markers that may help explain the BP variability observed with CTD treatment

Methods
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Conclusion

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