- Postmus, Iris;
- Warren, Helen R;
- Trompet, Stella;
- Arsenault, Benoit J;
- Avery, Christy L;
- Bis, Joshua C;
- Chasman, Daniel I;
- de Keyser, Catherine E;
- Deshmukh, Harshal A;
- Evans, Daniel S;
- Feng, QiPing;
- Li, Xiaohui;
- Smit, Roelof AJ;
- Smith, Albert V;
- Sun, Fangui;
- Taylor, Kent D;
- Arnold, Alice M;
- Barnes, Michael R;
- Barratt, Bryan J;
- Betteridge, John;
- Boekholdt, S Matthijs;
- Boerwinkle, Eric;
- Buckley, Brendan M;
- Chen, Y-D Ida;
- de Craen, Anton JM;
- Cummings, Steven R;
- Denny, Joshua C;
- Dubé, Marie Pierre;
- Durrington, Paul N;
- Eiriksdottir, Gudny;
- Ford, Ian;
- Guo, Xiuqing;
- Harris, Tamara B;
- Heckbert, Susan R;
- Hofman, Albert;
- Hovingh, G Kees;
- Kastelein, John JP;
- Launer, Leonore J;
- Liu, Ching-Ti;
- Liu, Yongmei;
- Lumley, Thomas;
- McKeigue, Paul M;
- Munroe, Patricia B;
- Neil, Andrew;
- Nickerson, Deborah A;
- Nyberg, Fredrik;
- O'Brien, Eoin;
- O'Donnell, Christopher J;
- Post, Wendy;
- Poulter, Neil;
- Vasan, Ramachandran S;
- Rice, Kenneth;
- Rich, Stephen S;
- Rivadeneira, Fernando;
- Sattar, Naveed;
- Sever, Peter;
- Shaw-Hawkins, Sue;
- Shields, Denis C;
- Slagboom, P Eline;
- Smith, Nicholas L;
- Smith, Joshua D;
- Sotoodehnia, Nona;
- Stanton, Alice;
- Stott, David J;
- Stricker, Bruno H;
- Stürmer, Til;
- Uitterlinden, André G;
- Wei, Wei-Qi;
- Westendorp, Rudi GJ;
- Whitsel, Eric A;
- Wiggins, Kerri L;
- Wilke, Russell A;
- Ballantyne, Christie M;
- Colhoun, Helen M;
- Cupples, L Adrienne;
- Franco, Oscar H;
- Gudnason, Vilmundur;
- Hitman, Graham;
- Palmer, Colin NA;
- Psaty, Bruce M;
- Ridker, Paul M;
- Stafford, Jeanette M;
- Stein, Charles M;
- Tardif, Jean-Claude;
- Caulfield, Mark J;
- Jukema, J Wouter;
- Rotter, Jerome I;
- Krauss, Ronald M
Background
In addition to lowering low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), statin therapy also raises high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. Inter-individual variation in HDL-C response to statins may be partially explained by genetic variation.Methods and results
We performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to identify variants with an effect on statin-induced high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) changes. The 123 most promising signals with p<1×10-4 from the 16 769 statin-treated participants in the first analysis stage were followed up in an independent group of 10 951 statin-treated individuals, providing a total sample size of 27 720 individuals. The only associations of genome-wide significance (p<5×10-8) were between minor alleles at the CETP locus and greater HDL-C response to statin treatment.Conclusions
Based on results from this study that included a relatively large sample size, we suggest that CETP may be the only detectable locus with common genetic variants that influence HDL-C response to statins substantially in individuals of European descent. Although CETP is known to be associated with HDL-C, we provide evidence that this pharmacogenetic effect is independent of its association with baseline HDL-C levels.