Abstract

Non-Hispanic whites present with higher atrial fibrillation (AF) prevalence than other racial minorities living in the mainland USA. In two hospital-based studies, Puerto Rican Hispanics had a lower prevalence of atrial fibrillation of 2.5% than non-Hispanic Whites with 5.7%. This data is particularly controversial because Hispanics possess a higher prevalence of traditional risk factors for developing AF yet have a lower AF prevalence. This phenomenon is known as the atrial fibrillation paradox. Despite recent advancements in understanding AF, its pathogenesis remains unclear. In this study, we compared a genetic dataset of Puerto Rican Hispanics to 111 SNP known to be associated with AF in a large European cohort and determine if they are associated with AF susceptibility in our cohort. To achieve this aim, we performed a secondary analysis of existing data using the following two studies: (1) The Pharmacogenetics of Warfarin in Puerto Ricans study and the (2) A Genomic Approach for Clopidogrel in Caribbean Hispanics, and assess for the presence of European SNPs associated with AF from the genome-wide association study of 1 million people identifies 111 loci for atrial fibrillation. We used data from 555 cardiovascular Puerto Rican Hispanic patients, consisting of 486 control and 69 cases. We found that the following SNPs showed significant association with AF in PHR: rs2834618, rs6462079, rs7508, rs2040862, and rs10458660. Some of these SNPs are proteins involved in lysosomal activities responsible for breaking ceramides to sphingosines and collagen deposition around atrial cardiomyocytes. Furthermore, we performed a machine learning analysis and determined that Native American admixture and heart failure were strongly predictive of AF in PHR. For the first time, this study provides some genetic insight into AF's mechanisms in a Puerto Rican Hispanic cohort.

Highlights

  • Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common arrhythmia worldwide that can cause cardioembolic events that travel to the brain and cause permanent neurological damage

  • We have identified 5 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) with a strong association with AF for the first time in a PRH cohort (i.e., SNPs with the strongest association: rs2834618, rs6462079, rs7508, rs2040862, and rs10458660)

  • This study needs to be replicated in a longitudinal study with a larger PRH cohort as AF status could change as the sample age

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Summary

Introduction

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common arrhythmia worldwide that can cause cardioembolic events that travel to the brain and cause permanent neurological damage. There are risk factors that can predispose to develop atrial fibrillation. One of the most influential risk factors is older age, diabetes, hypertension, structural heart disease, sleep apnea, and excessive alcohol ingestion [2, 3]. Multiethnic epidemiological studies have revealed that non-Hispanic Whites (NHW) have a higher prevalence of AF, almost a twofold higher incidence of AF, compared to Hispanics, Blacks, and Asians [4]. This fact may be counterintuitive, among Hispanics, because of their

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