Disease areas:
  • heart and blood vessels
Last updated:
Author(s):
James P. Pirruccello, Mark D. Chaffin, Elizabeth L. Chou, Stephen J. Fleming, Honghuang Lin, Mahan Nekoui, Shaan Khurshid, Samuel F. Friedman, Alexander G. Bick, Alessandro Arduini, Lu-Chen Weng, Seung Hoan Choi, Amer-Denis Akkad, Puneet Batra, Nathan R. Tucker, Amelia W. Hall, Carolina Roselli, Emelia J. Benjamin, Shamsudheen K. Vellarikkal, Rajat M. Gupta, Christian M. Stegmann, Dejan Juric, James R. Stone, Ramachandran S. Vasan, Jennifer E. Ho, Udo Hoffmann, Steven A. Lubitz, Anthony A. Philippakis, Mark E. Lindsay, Patrick T. Ellinor
Publish date:
26 November 2021
Journal:
Nature Genetics
PubMed ID:
34837083

Abstract

Enlargement or aneurysm of the aorta predisposes to dissection, an important cause of sudden death. We trained a deep learning model to evaluate the dimensions of the ascending and descending thoracic aorta in 4.6 million cardiac magnetic resonance images from the UK Biobank. We then conducted genome-wide association studies in 39,688 individuals, identifying 82 loci associated with ascending and 47 with descending thoracic aortic diameter, of which 14 loci overlapped. Transcriptome-wide analyses, rare-variant burden tests and human aortic single nucleus RNA sequencing prioritized genes including SVIL, which was strongly associated with descending aortic diameter. A polygenic score for ascending aortic diameter was associated with thoracic aortic aneurysm in 385,621 UK Biobank participants (hazard ratio = 1.43 per s.d., confidence interval 1.32-1.54, P = 3.3 × 10−20). Our results illustrate the potential for rapidly defining quantitative traits with deep learning, an approach that can be broadly applied to biomedical images.

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Institution:
Broad Institute, United States of America

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