Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5946095 Atherosclerosis 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the main cause of death in diabetic patients.•We examine the association between SNPs related to oxidative stress and the CHD risk.•Accumulation of pro-oxidant alleles is associated with the new onset of CHD.

ObjectiveOxidative stress, which is provoked in patients with diabetes, plays critical roles in the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease (CHD). We simultaneously determined 5 relatively common genetic variants related to oxidative stress and evaluated the combined effect on CHD.MethodsWe enrolled 1977 Japanese type 2 diabetic subjects without history of CVD (males 66.1%, 59.5 ± 10.0 years old), determined their genotypes regarding glutamate-cysteine ligase modifier subunit (GCLM) C-588T, manganese superoxide dismutase (SOD2) Val16Ala, endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS3) G894T, NAD(P)H oxidase p22phox (CYBA) C242T, and myeloperoxidase (MPO) G-463A polymorphisms, and prospectively evaluated the association between these polymorphisms and CHD events.ResultsThe median follow-up period was 7.5 years and there were 85 new CHD events. The single association analysis revealed that there were no statistically significant associations between each polymorphism and the prevalence of CHD. Interestingly, the risk of CHD event was higher with the increase of the total number of 10 concomitant unfavorable “pro-oxidant alleles” in each subject (p for trend = 0.018, log-rank test). Especially, the carriers of ≥8 pro-oxidant alleles had a significantly increased risk as compared to the carriers of <8 pro-oxidant alleles, whether the other clinical variables were adjusted (HR 2.92 with 95%CI 1.50-5.67, p = 0.002) or not (HR 2.89 with 95%CI 1.49-5.59, p = 0.002)..ConclusionsAccumulation of gene polymorphisms related to oxidative stress is likely associated with the development of CHD in patients with type 2 diabetes, suggesting that the combined information about these variants is useful to assess the risk of CHD.

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