The Scotsman

£40 DNA test could predict risk of future heart attacks

● One-off genetic test would cost less than £40 and could be used on children

- By JOHN VON RADOWITZ

A DNA test costing less than £40 can predict the future risk of heart attacks from infancy.

The one-off genetic tests could be used at any age, meaning children could be screened to identify health issues that would arise in adulthood.

Researcher­s say the groundbrea­king method could help prevent the enormous burden of coronary heart disease (CHD) by helping doctors select patients who would benefit most from early interventi­ons.

CHD claims 66,000 lives each year in the UK.

A one-off genetic test costing less than £40 can show if a person is born with a predisposi­tion to heart disease.

The Genomic Risk Score (GRS) test is cheap enough to allow population-wide-screening of children, researcher­s have claimed.

Medical and lifestylet­hen be employed to reduce the chances of those most at risk of suffering heart attacks in adulthood.

Participan­ts with a GRS in the top 20 per cent were more than four times more likely to develop coronary heart disease than those with scores in the bottom 20 per cent. Many in the “at risk” category lacked the usual heart disease indicators such as high cholestero­l and blood pressure.

Senior author Sir Nilesh Samani, from the University of Leicester and medical director of the British Heart Foundation, said: “At the moment we assess people for their risk of coronary heart disease in their 40s through NHS health checks. But we know this is imprecise and also that coronary heart disease starts much earlier, several decades before symptoms develop.

“Therefore if we are going to do true prevention, we need to identify those at increased risk much earlier. “This study shows that the GRS can now identify such individual­s.

“Applying it could provide a most cost-effective way of preventing the enormous burden of coronary heart disease by helping doctors select patients who would most benefit from interventi­ons and avoiding unnecessar­y screening and treatments for those unlikely to benefit.”

Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death worldwide and claims 66,000 lives each year in the UK. Healthcare costs related to heart and circulator­y diseases in the UK are estimated at £9 billion a year.

Doctors use a scoring system under the existing system based on lifestyle and clinical conditions such as cholestero­l level, blood pressure and diabetes to identify people at risk of heart disease.

But this method is imprecise, age-dependent and misses a large proportion of individual­s who appear “healthy”, but still develop the disease. The scientists mined “big data” from 1.7 million genetic variants in people’s DNA to develop the GRS test.

DNA samples from almost half a million participan­ts in the UK Biobank project aged 40 to 69 were analysed.

The Biobank holds a treasure trove of detailed health and genetic informatio­n on around 500,000 people to assist research.

Among the GRS study group were 22,000 people with coronary heart disease.

The GRS test was better at predicting a person’s risk of developing heart disease than each of the classic risk factors alone.

Because DNA sequences are generally fixed from birth, the GRS test can be used at any age.

This raises the possibilit­y of screening children or even infants for future heart disease risk.

The cost of genotyping to calculate a GRS score is less than $US50 (£38). The study was part-funded by the British Heart Foundation.

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