Genetic risk for COVID-19 outcomes in COPD and differences among worldwide populations
2021
Marçalo, R. | Neto, S. | Pinheiro, M. | Rodrigues, A. J. | Sousa, N. | Santos, M. A. S. | Simão, P. | Valente, C. | Andrade, L. | Marques, A. | Moura, G. R.
People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) constitute one of COVID-19 risk groups for poor prognosis upon infection. Variability in predisposition and clinical response to COVID-19 exist but our understanding of these factors in the COPD population is limited. This study explored the genetic background as a possible answer to COVID-19 infection response heterogeneity, either for the poor prognosis in people with COPD or across healthy worldwide populations. Significant SNPs (susceptibility: rs286914/rs123297601–3; severity: rs657152/rs113859424) were selected from the literature and their allelic frequencies5,6 used to calculate the probability of having multiple risk alleles in both our COPD cohort and each worldwide population. A polygenic risk analysis was conducted in the COPD cohort for the two mentioned phenotypes, and for hospitalization and survival to COVID-19 infection. No differences in genetic risk for COVID-19 susceptibility, hospitalization, severity or survival were found between people with COPD and the control group (all p-values>0.01), either considering risk alleles individually, allelic combinations or polygenic risk scores. Alternatively, all populations, even those with European ancestry (Portuguese/Spanish/Italian), showed significant differences from the European population in genetic risk for COVID-19 susceptibility and severity (all p-values<0.0001). Our results indicated a low genetic contribution for COVID-19 infection predisposition or worse outcomes in people with COPD. Also, our study unveiled a high genetic heterogeneity across major world populations for the same alleles, even within European subpopulations.
Show more [+] Less [-]Not Published
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by Universidade de Aveiro