Title
Effect of the stromelysin-1 promoter on efficacy of pravastatin in coronary atherosclerosis and restenosis
Author
Gaubius instituut TNO
de Maat, M.P.M.
Jukema, J.W.
Ye, S.
Zwinderman, A.H.
Moghaddam, P.H.
Beekman, M.
Kastelein, J.J.P.
van Boven, A.J.
Bruschke, A.V.G.
Humphries, S.E.
Kluft, C.
Henney, A.M.
Publication year
1999
Abstract
It has proved difficult to identify high-risk patients for atherosclerosis and to determine how they might respond to medication. Recently, a common promoter variant of the human stromelysin-1 gene has been reported, which has been shown to affect the transcription. We investigated whether this polymorphism had any impact on the risk of events, especially restenosis and progression of coronary artery disease and whether the effect was modulated by treatment with pravastatin. The stromelysin-1 genotype was determined for 496 men with coronary artery disease and cholesterol levels between 4.0 and 8.0 mmol/L, participating in the Regression Growth Evaluation Satin Study (REGRESS) study, a clinical trial assessing the effect of the lipid-lowering drug pravastatin on the progression of atherosclerosis. Patients in the placebo group with 5A6A or 6A6A genotypes had more clinical events than patients with the 5A5A genotype (26% and 12%, respectively, p = 0.03). In the pravastatin group, the risk of clinical events in patients with 5A6A or 6A6A genotypes was lower, compared with placebo, whereas it was unchanged in those with a 5A5A genotype (p value for interaction: 0.038). Also, the incidence of repeat angioplasty in the placebo group was greater in patients with the 6A6A or 5A6A genotypes, compared with 5A homozygotes (38% and 40%, respectively, vs 11%, p = 0.09). Again, treatment substantially reduced the incidence in heterozygotes and 6A homozygotes (0% and 15%, respectively), whereas it was unchanged in 5A homozygotes (28%, p for interaction: 0.002). These effects were independent of the effects of pravastatin on the lipid levels. Thus, this study suggests that the stomelysin-1 promoter polymorphism confers a genotype-specific response to medication in determining clinical event-free survival and the risk for symptom-driven repeat angioplasty. This variant may therefore act as a predictor, not only of disease progression, but also of response to therapy and risk of restenosis.
Subject
Anticholesteremic Agents
Cholesterol
Coronary Arteriosclerosis
Disease-Free Survival
Genotype
Humans
Male
Matrix Metalloproteinase 3
Multicenter Studies
Polymorphism, Genetic
Pravastatin
Promoter Regions (Genetics)
Randomized Controlled Trials
Recurrence
Treatment Outcome
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http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:69ab70cd-0cc1-4601-baef-a6fc2f1677fb
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0002-9149(98)01073-x
TNO identifier
280452
ISSN
0002-9149
Source
American Journal of Cardiology, 83 (83), 852-856
Document type
article