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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Nat Rev Nephrol. 2015 Nov 23;12(2):110–122. doi: 10.1038/nrneph.2015.176

Table 1.

Top pharmacogenomic signals associated with blood pressure response and/or cardiovascular outcomes

Association Drug class Locus (SNP) Associated allele Magnitude of effect
BP response and CV outcomes Thiazide diuretic NEDD4L (rs4149601) G allele BP lowering: G allele associated with greater BP response (−19.5 versus −15.0 mmHg SBP and −15.4 versus −14.0 mmHg DBP)38
Adverse CV outcomes: G allele associated with reduced risk of CV outcomes in NORDIL β-blocker/diuretic arm (OR 0.52, P <0.0001)38
G allele (one or two copies) associated with increased risk of CV outcomes when a thiazide diuretic was not included in treatment (OR 8.94–10.7, P = 0.051–0.022)39
β-blocker ADRB1 (rs1801253 [Arg389Gly]) C allele C allele (arginine) homozygotes had greater BP response to metoprolol: −6.5 mmHg in 24 h DBP more than G (glycine) allele carriers (P = 0.0018)45
ADRB1 (rs1801252 [Ser49Gly]) A allele A allele (serine) homozygotes had similar trend for greater DBP response to metoprolol (P = 0.08)45
ADRB1 Ser49/Arg389 haplotype Haplotype Ser49Arg389/Ser49Arg389 haplotype associated with greater BP response to metoprolol (−14.7 mmHg versus −0.5 mmHg in patients with the Gly49Arg389/Ser49Gly389 haplotype; P = 0.006)45
Mortality risk was significantly increased among patients with one or two copies of the Ser49/Arg389 haplotype who were randomly assigned to verapamil SR (HR 8.58, 95% CI 2.06–35.8, P = 0.003) but not in patients assigned to atenolol (HR 2.31, 95% CI 0.82–6.55, P = 0.11)51
BP response Thiazide diuretic Chromosome 12, LYZ, YEATS4, FRS2 (rs7297610, rs317689, rs315135) Primarily driven by C allele of rs7297610 African Americans who were homozygous for CC alleles had a greater mean SBP response (−13 versus −9.6 mmHg) and DBP response (−8 versus −5.2 mmHg) than homozygous carriers of TT alleles57
PRKCA (rs16960228) A allele A allele carriers had a 4/4 mmHg greater BP response than GG homozygotes58
GNASEDN3 rs2273359 G allele G allele carriers had a 7/5 mmHg greater BP response than CC homozygotes58
β-blocker GRK4 (rs2960306 [Arg65Leu], rs1024323 [Ala142Val], rs1081058 [Ala486Val]) T allele for all three SNPs Increasing copies of the 65Leu–142Val haplotype were associated with significantly reduced atenolol-induced DBP lowering (−9.1 ± 6.8 versus −6.8 ± 7.1 versus −5.3 ± 6.4 mmHg in participants with zero, one, and two copies of 65Leu–142Val, respectively; P = 0.0088)74
CV outcomes CCB SIGLEC12, A1BG, F5 (rs16982743, rs893184, rs4525) Risk score with one point given for each genotype that conferred a higher risk in the CCB arm than the β-blocker arm In patients with a genetic risk score of 0 or 1, CCB treatment was associated with lower risk of treatment-related adverse CV outcomes (heart attack, stroke or death; OR 0.60, 95% CI 0.42–0.86); in patients with a genetic risk score of 2–3, CCB treatment was associated with higher risk (OR 1.31, 95% CI 1.08–1.59; meta-analysis interaction P = 2.39 × 10−5)84

ARB, angiotensin-receptor blocker; BP, blood pressure; CCB, calcium channel blocker; CV, cardiovascular; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism, SR, slow release.