Association of genetic ancestry with pre-eclampsia in multi-ethnic cohorts of pregnant women
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Published version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Objectives
Maternal self-reported ethnicity is recognised as a risk factor for pre-eclampsia in clinical screening tools and models. This study investigated whether ethnicity is acting as a proxy for genetic variants in this context.
Study design
A total of 436 women from multi-ethnic backgrounds recruited to two UK observational pregnancy hypertension cohort studies were genotyped. Genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were calculated for each individual through comparison to the multi-ethnic 1000 Genomes reference panel genotypes. Regression models for pre-eclampsia using clinical risk factors including self-reported ethnicity with and without ancestry estimates were built and compared using Likelihood Ratio Tests (LRT).
Main outcome measures
Pre-eclampsia (early- and late-onset).
Results
In these multi-ethnic cohorts (mean age 34.9 years; 41.3 % White, 34.2 % Black, 13.1 % Asian ethnic backgrounds; 82.6 % chronic hypertension), discrepancies between self-reported ethnicity and genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were present in all ethnic groups, particularly minority groups. Genetically-computed pan-African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset (< 34 weeks) pre-eclampsia in adjusted models (aOR 100 % vs 0 % African ancestry: 3.81, 95 % CI 1.04–14.14, p-value 0.044) independently of self-reported ethnicity and established clinical risk factors. Addition of genetically-computed African ancestry to a clinical risk factor model including self-reported ethnicity, improved model fit (Likelihood ratio test p-value 0.023).
Conclusions
Self-reported maternal ethnicity is an imperfect proxy for genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates, particularly in ethnic minority groups. Genetically-computed African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset pre-eclampsia independently of self-reported maternal ethnicity. Well-powered studies in multi-ethnic cohorts are required to delineate the genetic contribution to pre-eclampsia.
Maternal self-reported ethnicity is recognised as a risk factor for pre-eclampsia in clinical screening tools and models. This study investigated whether ethnicity is acting as a proxy for genetic variants in this context.
Study design
A total of 436 women from multi-ethnic backgrounds recruited to two UK observational pregnancy hypertension cohort studies were genotyped. Genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were calculated for each individual through comparison to the multi-ethnic 1000 Genomes reference panel genotypes. Regression models for pre-eclampsia using clinical risk factors including self-reported ethnicity with and without ancestry estimates were built and compared using Likelihood Ratio Tests (LRT).
Main outcome measures
Pre-eclampsia (early- and late-onset).
Results
In these multi-ethnic cohorts (mean age 34.9 years; 41.3 % White, 34.2 % Black, 13.1 % Asian ethnic backgrounds; 82.6 % chronic hypertension), discrepancies between self-reported ethnicity and genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates were present in all ethnic groups, particularly minority groups. Genetically-computed pan-African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset (< 34 weeks) pre-eclampsia in adjusted models (aOR 100 % vs 0 % African ancestry: 3.81, 95 % CI 1.04–14.14, p-value 0.044) independently of self-reported ethnicity and established clinical risk factors. Addition of genetically-computed African ancestry to a clinical risk factor model including self-reported ethnicity, improved model fit (Likelihood ratio test p-value 0.023).
Conclusions
Self-reported maternal ethnicity is an imperfect proxy for genetically-computed individual ancestry estimates, particularly in ethnic minority groups. Genetically-computed African ancestry percentage was associated with early-onset pre-eclampsia independently of self-reported maternal ethnicity. Well-powered studies in multi-ethnic cohorts are required to delineate the genetic contribution to pre-eclampsia.
Date Issued
2024-12
Date Acceptance
2024-09-30
Citation
Pregnancy Hypertension, 2024, 38
ISSN
2210-7789
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Journal / Book Title
Pregnancy Hypertension
Volume
38
Copyright Statement
© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of International Society for the Study of Hypertension in Pregnancy. This is an open access
article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
License URL
Identifier
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.preghy.2024.101162
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
101162
Date Publish Online
2024-10-04