Lymphocyte Count Derived Polygenic Score and Interindividual Variability in CD4 T-cell Recovery in Response to Antiretroviral Therapy.

Q2 Computer Science
Kathleen M Cardone, Scott Dudek, Karl Keat, Yuki Bradford, Zinhle Cindi, Eric S Daar, Roy Gulick, Sharon A Riddler, Jeffrey L Lennox, Phumla Sinxadi, David W Haas, Marylyn D Ritchie
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Abstract

Access to safe and effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a cornerstone in the global response to the HIV pandemic. Among people living with HIV, there is considerable interindividual variability in absolute CD4 T-cell recovery following initiation of virally suppressive ART. The contribution of host genetics to this variability is not well understood. We explored the contribution of a polygenic score which was derived from large, publicly available summary statistics for absolute lymphocyte count from individuals in the general population (PGSlymph) due to a lack of publicly available summary statistics for CD4 T-cell count. We explored associations with baseline CD4 T-cell count prior to ART initiation (n=4959) and change from baseline to week 48 on ART (n=3274) among treatment-naïve participants in prospective, randomized ART studies of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group. We separately examined an African-ancestry-derived and a European-ancestry-derived PGSlymph, and evaluated their performance across all participants, and also in the African and European ancestral groups separately. Multivariate models that included PGSlymph, baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA, age, sex, and 15 principal components (PCs) of genetic similarity explained ∼26-27% of variability in baseline CD4 T-cell count, but PGSlymph accounted for <1% of this variability. Models that also included baseline CD4 T-cell count explained ∼7-9% of variability in CD4 T-cell count increase on ART, but PGSlymph accounted for <1% of this variability. In univariate analyses, PGSlymph was not significantly associated with baseline or change in CD4 T-cell count. Among individuals of African ancestry, the African PGSlymph term in the multivariate model was significantly associated with change in CD4 T-cell count while not significant in the univariate model. When applied to lymphocyte count in a general medical biobank population (Penn Medicine BioBank), PGSlymph explained ∼6-10% of variability in multivariate models (including age, sex, and PCs) but only ∼1% in univariate models. In summary, a lymphocyte count PGS derived from the general population was not consistently associated with CD4 T-cell recovery on ART. Nonetheless, adjusting for clinical covariates is quite important when estimating such polygenic effects.

淋巴细胞计数得出的多基因评分与抗逆转录病毒疗法后 CD4 T 细胞恢复的个体间差异。
获得安全有效的抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)是全球应对艾滋病大流行的基石。在艾滋病病毒感染者中,开始接受病毒抑制性抗逆转录病毒疗法后,CD4 T 细胞的绝对恢复能力在个体间存在相当大的差异。宿主遗传学对这一变异性的贡献尚不十分清楚。由于缺乏可公开获得的 CD4 T 细胞计数汇总统计数据,我们对多基因评分的贡献进行了探讨,该评分来自可公开获得的大量普通人群(PGSlymph)绝对淋巴细胞计数汇总统计数据。我们探讨了艾滋病临床试验组(AIDS Clinical Trials Group)前瞻性随机抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)研究中未接受过治疗的参与者中,抗逆转录病毒疗法开始前的 CD4 T 细胞计数基线(4959 人)和从基线到抗逆转录病毒疗法第 48 周的变化(3274 人)之间的关联。我们分别研究了非洲裔和欧洲裔的 PGSlymph,并评估了它们在所有参与者中的表现,以及在非洲裔和欧洲裔群体中的表现。包含 PGSlymph、基线血浆 HIV-1 RNA、年龄、性别和 15 个遗传相似性主成分 (PCs) 的多变量模型解释了基线 CD4 T 细胞计数变异的 26% 至 27%,而 PGSlymph 则解释了基线 CD4 T 细胞计数变异的 26% 至 27%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.50
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