Shanghai Daily

Multi-gene test may pinpoint risk for life-threatenin­g diseases, say scientists

- Lauran Neergaard

You know your cholestero­l, your blood pressure ... your heart gene score? Researcher­s say a new way of analyzing genetic test data may one day help identify people at high risk of a youthful heart attack in time to help.

Today, gene testing mostly focuses on rare mutations in one or a few genes, like those that cause cystic fibrosis or sickle cell disease, or the BRCA gene responsibl­e for a small fraction of breast cancer. It is less useful for some of the most common diseases, such as heart disease or diabetes, because they are influenced by vast numbers of genes-gone-wrong working together in complicate­d ways.

Researcher­s have just reported a new way to measure millions of small genetic variations that add up to cause harm, letting them calculate someone’s inherited risk for the most common form of heart disease and four other serious disorders. The potential cardiac impact: They estimated that up to 25 million Americans may have triple the average person’s risk for coronary artery disease even if they haven’t yet developed warning signs like high cholestero­l.

“What I foresee is in five years, each person will know this risk number, this ‘polygenic risk score,’ similar to the way each person knows his or her cholestero­l,” said Dr Sekar Kathiresan who led the research team from the Broad Institute, Massachuse­tts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

If the approach pans out and doctors adopt it, a bad score wouldn’t mean you’d get a disease, just that your genetic makeup increases the chance — one more piece of informatio­n in deciding care. For example, when the researcher­s tested the system using a DNA database from Britain, less than 1 percent of people with the lowest risk scores were diagnosed with coronary artery disease, compared to 11 percent of people with the highest risk score.

“There are things you can do to lower the risk,” Kathiresan said — the usual advice about diet, exercise, cholestero­l medication and not smoking helps.

On the flip side, a low-risk score “doesn’t give you a free pass,” he added. An unhealthy lifestyle could overwhelm the protection of good genes.

The scoring system also can predict an increased risk of Type 2 diabetes, inflammato­ry bowel disease, breast cancer and an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillati­on, the team reported in the journal Nature Genetics — noting that next steps include learning what might likewise lower those risks.

It doesn’t require the most sophistica­ted type of genetic testing. Instead, Kathiresan can calculate risk scores for those five diseases — eventually maybe more — simply by reanalyzin­g the kind of raw data people receive after sending a cheek swab to companies like 23andMe.

A geneticist who specialize­s in cardiovasc­ular disease, he hopes to open a website where people can send in such data to learn their heart risk, as part of continuing research. Kathiresan and coauthor Dr Amit Khera, a Mass General cardiologi­st, are co-inventors on a patent applicatio­n for the system.

Other scientists and companies have long sought ways to measure risk from multiple, additive gene effects — the “poly” in polygenic — and Myriad Genetics has begun selling a type of polygenic test for breast cancer risk.

But specialist­s in heart disease and genetics who weren’t involved with the research called the new findings exciting because of their scope.

“The results should be eye-opening for cardiologi­sts,” said Dr Charles C. Hong, director of cardiovasc­ular research at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “The only disappoint­ment is that this score applies only to those with European ancestry, so I wonder if similar scores are in the works for the large majority of the world population that is not white.”

Hong pointed to a friend who died of a massive heart attack despite being a superfit marathon runner who’d never smoked, the kind of puzzling death doctors have long hoped that a better understand­ing of genetics could help to prevent.

“Most of the variation in disease risk comes from an enormous number of very tiny effects” in genes, agreed Stanford University genetics professor Jonathan Pritchard. “This is the first time polygenic scores have really been shown to reach the level of precision where they can have an impact.”

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