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Oxford University Press, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 5(24), p. 492-504, 2016

DOI: 10.1177/2047487316682186

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Genetic invalidation of Lp-PLA2 as a therapeutic target: large-scale study of five functional Lp-PLA2-lowering alleles

Journal article published in 2016 by John M. Gregson, Daniel F. Freitag, Nathan O. Stitziel, Gregson Jm, Praveen Surendran, James R. Staley, Freitag Df, Rajiv Chowdhury ORCID, Sune F. Nielsen, Stephen Kaptoge, Stephen Burgess, Linda M. Polfus, Kari Kuulasmaa, Jukka Kontto ORCID, Markus Perola and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Aims Darapladib, a potent inhibitor of lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2), has not reduced risk of cardiovascular disease outcomes in recent randomized trials. We aimed to test whether Lp-PLA2 enzyme activity is causally relevant to coronary heart disease. Methods In 72,657 patients with coronary heart disease and 110,218 controls in 23 epidemiological studies, we genotyped five functional variants: four rare loss-of-function mutations (c.109+2T > C (rs142974898), Arg82His (rs144983904), Val279Phe (rs76863441), Gln287Ter (rs140020965)) and one common modest-impact variant (Val379Ala (rs1051931)) in PLA2G7, the gene encoding Lp-PLA2. We supplemented de-novo genotyping with information on a further 45,823 coronary heart disease patients and 88,680 controls in publicly available databases and other previous studies. We conducted a systematic review of randomized trials to compare effects of darapladib treatment on soluble Lp-PLA2 activity, conventional cardiovascular risk factors, and coronary heart disease risk with corresponding effects of Lp-PLA2-lowering alleles. Results Lp-PLA2 activity was decreased by 64% ( p = 2.4 × 10(-25)) with carriage of any of the four loss-of-function variants, by 45% ( p