Background

Childhood hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) survivors have been shown to be at increased risk for a variety of long-term cardiometabolic sequelae. However, it is unclear if genetic factors can modify the levels of various quantitative cardiometabolic traits in this population.

Methods

Prospective cross-sectional study of ≥2-year survivors of pediatric allogeneic (n=47) or autologous (n=27) HCT recruited from two centers. Allogeneic HCT survivors had to be free of chronic GVHD and off immunosuppression at time of assessment. All participants underwent detailed physiologic measurements (euglycemic insulin clamp, body composition assessments, blood pressure, fasting lipids) and also provided DNA samples (both donor and host if allogeneic HCT recipient). A panel of carefully annotated genes and respective single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with each cardiometabolic trait (fat mass, body mass index, insulin resistance, triglyceride, HDL and LDL cholesterol) was assembled based on evidence from the general population using the Human Genome Epidemiology (HuGE) Navigator (accessed March 2013). For each trait, we estimated the least square mean values and determined the overall and pairwise p-values among genotypes. Multiple comparisons were controlled for using Benjamini and Hochberg’s false discovery rate. For initial validation, a separate dataset of 134 ≥2-year pediatric allogeneic HCT survivors without active chronic GVHD and retrospectively collected phenotypes was available.

Results

Among the primary study participants (n=74), 73% were exposed to total body irradiation, and their median current age was 24 years (range 10-50), with median interval since HCT of 11.4 years (range 2.6-27.6). 95% of these survivors self-reported White non-Hispanic race/ethnicity. Host polymorphisms in LPL (rs319; p=0.0009) and ADRB2 (rs12654778; p=0.002) were found to be significantly associated with differences in triglyceride levels and body mass index, respectively. While several other genes (all host) had SNPs that were associated with various outcomes (e.g. ADIPOQ and insulin resistance, CETP with both HDL and LDL-cholesterol; all p<0.01), none met statistical significance as defined by the false discovery rate (Table). No donor polymorphisms was found to be associated. Among the validation sample (74% exposed to total body irradiation, 100% White non-Hispanic), host rs319 had no association with triglyceride levels (p=0.81). An effort to validate the other polymorphisms listed above is ongoing.

Table

Distribution of host genotypes associated (overall p-value <0.01) with cardiometabolic traits of interest.

Trait* (unit of measurement) Gene SNP Genotype N† (%) Mean trait value P-value, pairwise P-value, overall FDR threshold 
Triglyceride LPL rs319 AA 35 (47.3) 108.2 Ref 0.0009‡ 0.0010 
(mg/dL)   AC 35 (47.3) 254.1 0.0005 
   CC (5.4) 
Body mass index ADRB2 rs12654778 GG 18 (25.0) 26.7 Ref 0.0020‡ 0.0025 
(kg/m2  AG 49 (68.1) 22.5 0.0070 
   AA (6.9) 30.2 0.22 
HDL cholesterol CETP rs820299 TT 31 43.1 49.0 Ref 0.0058 0.0012 
(mg/dL)   TC 37 51.4 41.2 0.0046 
   CC 5.6 
  rs1532624 GG 17 23.9 39.8 Ref 0.0086 0.0019 
   TG 42 59.2 43.6 0.22 
   TT 12 16.9 52.8 0.0017 
  rs12597002 CC 38 53.5 47.8 Ref 0.0044 0.0006 
   AC 32 45.1 39.8 0.0033 
   AA 1.4 
Insulin resistance ADIPOQ rs3821799 CC 18 25.4 11.7 Ref 0.0082 0.0005 
(Mlbm)   TC 47 66.2 10.1 0.22 
   TT 8.5 17.3 0.0229   
LDL cholesterol CETP rs289714 TT 38 51.4 117.2 Ref 0.0094 0.0007 
(mg/dL)   TC 33 44.6 94.3 0.0077 
   CC 4.1 
Trait* (unit of measurement) Gene SNP Genotype N† (%) Mean trait value P-value, pairwise P-value, overall FDR threshold 
Triglyceride LPL rs319 AA 35 (47.3) 108.2 Ref 0.0009‡ 0.0010 
(mg/dL)   AC 35 (47.3) 254.1 0.0005 
   CC (5.4) 
Body mass index ADRB2 rs12654778 GG 18 (25.0) 26.7 Ref 0.0020‡ 0.0025 
(kg/m2  AG 49 (68.1) 22.5 0.0070 
   AA (6.9) 30.2 0.22 
HDL cholesterol CETP rs820299 TT 31 43.1 49.0 Ref 0.0058 0.0012 
(mg/dL)   TC 37 51.4 41.2 0.0046 
   CC 5.6 
  rs1532624 GG 17 23.9 39.8 Ref 0.0086 0.0019 
   TG 42 59.2 43.6 0.22 
   TT 12 16.9 52.8 0.0017 
  rs12597002 CC 38 53.5 47.8 Ref 0.0044 0.0006 
   AC 32 45.1 39.8 0.0033 
   AA 1.4 
Insulin resistance ADIPOQ rs3821799 CC 18 25.4 11.7 Ref 0.0082 0.0005 
(Mlbm)   TC 47 66.2 10.1 0.22 
   TT 8.5 17.3 0.0229   
LDL cholesterol CETP rs289714 TT 38 51.4 117.2 Ref 0.0094 0.0007 
(mg/dL)   TC 33 44.6 94.3 0.0077 
   CC 4.1 

FDR, false discovery rate; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism.

*Only traits where an association was found are listed.

† Genotypes with less than 5 observations were not included in analysis.

‡ Overall p-value less than FDR threshold.

Conclusion

It is possible that underlying genetic factors may influence subsequent development of adverse metabolic traits, even among heavily treated childhood cancer survivors. However, any associations require further validation. Furthermore, the relatively small numbers of such patients at most centers limit the power of such genetic investigations. Future efforts should focus on developing appropriate consortia in which samples may be pooled. Application of rigorous phenotype definitions may also enhance the likelihood of identifying true genetic associations.

Disclosures:

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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