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Generality of Genomic Findings on Blood Pressure Traits and Its Usefulness in Precision Medicine in Diverse Populations: A Systematic Review.

Clinical Genetics 2019 Februrary 29
Remarkable findings from genome wide association studies (GWAS) on blood pressure (BP) traits have made new insights for developing precision medicine towards more effective screening measures. However, generality of GWAS findings in diverse populations is hampered by some technical limitations. There is no comprehensive study to evaluate source(s) of the non-generality of GWAS results on BP traits, so to fill the gap, this systematic review study was carried out. Using MeSH terms, 1545 records were detected through searching in 5 databases and 49 relevant full-text articles were included in our review. Overall, 749 unique variants were reported, of those, majority of variants have been detected in Europeans and were associated to systolic and diastolic blood pressure traits. Frequency of genetic variants with same position was low in European and Non-European populations (n=38). However, more than 200 (>25%) single nucleotide polymorphism were found on same loci or linkage disequilibrium blocks (r2 ≥80%). Investigating for locus position and linkage disequilibrium of infrequent unique variants showed modest to high reproducibility of findings in Europeans that in some extent was generalizable in other populations. Beyond theoretical limitations, our study addressed other possible sources of non-generality of GWAS findings for BP traits in same and different origins.

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