The aspiration of precision medicine is to personalize our approach to individual patients. One question is whether patients have sufficient heterogeneity in their responses to common treatments such that we can identify who has the most to gain.
A previous study associated a polygenic risk score with relative reductions in risk for coronary heart disease, obtained from statin therapy (Lancet 2015; 385:2264). Now, investigators have examined whether an expanded polygenic risk score based on 57 DNA sequence variants associated with coronary disease had associations with the relative reduction in risk with statin therapy.
In WOSCOPS, a primary prevention trial (NEJM JW Cardiol Nov 2007 and N Engl J Med 2007; 357:1477), high genetic risk was ass…
Reviewing Author
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardUnited Healthcare; Element Science; Eyedentifeye, F-Prime
EquityHugo Health; Refactor Health; Element Science
Grant/Research SupportPfizer; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Janssen Research and Development, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Engineering; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; National Cancer Institute; American Heart Association
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardUnited Healthcare; Element Science; Eyedentifeye, F-Prime
EquityHugo Health; Refactor Health; Element Science
Grant/Research SupportPfizer; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Janssen Research and Development, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Engineering; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; National Cancer Institute; American Heart Association