학술논문

A genetic risk score and diabetes predict development of alcohol-related cirrhosis in drinkers
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Hepatology. 76(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Rare Diseases
Liver Cancer
Genetics
Liver Disease
Clinical Research
Substance Misuse
Genetic Testing
Cancer
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
Digestive Diseases
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Metabolic and endocrine
Oral and gastrointestinal
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Alcohol Drinking
Case-Control Studies
Cohort Studies
Diabetes Mellitus
Female
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Liver Cirrhosis
Alcoholic
Male
Middle Aged
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Risk Assessment
Hepatocellular carcinoma
risk stratification
chronic alcohol use
genome-wide association
single nucleotide polymorphism
coffee
GenomALC Consortium
Public Health and Health Services
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Background & aimsOnly a minority of excess alcohol drinkers develop cirrhosis. We developed and evaluated risk stratification scores to identify those at highest risk.MethodsThree cohorts (GenomALC-1: n = 1,690, GenomALC-2: n = 3,037, UK Biobank: relevant n = 6,898) with a history of heavy alcohol consumption (≥80 g/day (men), ≥50 g/day (women), for ≥10 years) were included. Cases were participants with alcohol-related cirrhosis. Controls had a history of similar alcohol consumption but no evidence of liver disease. Risk scores were computed from up to 8 genetic loci identified previously as associated with alcohol-related cirrhosis and 3 clinical risk factors. Score performance for the stratification of alcohol-related cirrhosis risk was assessed and compared across the alcohol-related liver disease spectrum, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).ResultsA combination of 3 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (PNPLA3:rs738409, SUGP1-TM6SF2:rs10401969, HSD17B13:rs6834314) and diabetes status best discriminated cirrhosis risk. The odds ratios (ORs) and (95% CIs) between the lowest (Q1) and highest (Q5) score quintiles of the 3-SNP score, based on independent allelic effect size estimates, were 5.99 (4.18-8.60) (GenomALC-1), 2.81 (2.03-3.89) (GenomALC-2), and 3.10 (2.32-4.14) (UK Biobank). Patients with diabetes and high risk scores had ORs of 14.7 (7.69-28.1) (GenomALC-1) and 17.1 (11.3-25.7) (UK Biobank) compared to those without diabetes and with low risk scores. Patients with cirrhosis and HCC had significantly higher mean risk scores than patients with cirrhosis alone (0.76 ± 0.06 vs. 0.61 ± 0.02, p = 0.007). Score performance was not significantly enhanced by information on additional genetic risk variants, body mass index or coffee consumption.ConclusionsA risk score based on 3 genetic risk variants and diabetes status enables the stratification of heavy drinkers based on their risk of cirrhosis, allowing for the provision of earlier preventative interventions.Lay summaryExcessive chronic drinking leads to cirrhosis in some people, but so far there is no way to identify those at high risk of developing this debilitating disease. We developed a genetic risk score that can identify patients at high risk. The risk of cirrhosis is increased >10-fold with just two risk factors - diabetes and a high genetic risk score. Risk assessment using this test could enable the early and personalised management of this disease in high-risk patients.