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Predicting risk of stroke from one's genetic blueprint

February 26, 2009

Boston, Mass. -- A new statistical model could be used to predict an individual's lifetime risk of stroke, finds a study from the Children's Hospital Informatics Program (CHIP). Using genetic information from 569 hospital patients, the researchers showed that their predictive model could estimate an individual's overall risk of cardioembolic stroke -- the most common form of stroke -- with 86 percent accuracy. The findings are reported in the March issue of Stroke.

"For complex diseases like stroke, it's not just a single mutation that will kill you," explains CHIP researcher Marco Ramoni, PhD, the study's senior author, who is also an Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School. "More likely it is an interaction of many factors."

Ramoni, in collaboration with Karen Furie, MD, the director of the stroke unit at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), and Rachel Ramoni, DMD, ScD, of the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, identified 569 patients that had presented to MGH's emergency department and outpatient neurology clinics between 2002 and 2005 with symptoms of suspected stroke. They collected genetic information from the 146 patients with confirmed cardioembolic stroke, and 423 controls who were followed and found not to have stroke, and looked for 1,313 genetic variants (called single nucleotide polymorphisms or SNPs) known to correlate with stroke. The SNPs that each patient had were then entered into the model -- known as a Bayesian network -- which not only identified the genetic variants that correlated with stroke, but also determined how these factors interplayed and the strength of these interactions.

A Bayesian network showing the relationship and interactions between individual genetic predictors (blue spheres) and stroke (red sphere). The predictive influence of race on stroke is also included (yellow sphere).
"The model looks for factors, combines them and finds out which are the best predictive factors," explains Ramoni. "It's never one factor at a time, it's always more than one factor. What this technology allows you to do is to generate a network of factors that contribute to stroke."

The researchers found that the model was able to predict an individual's risk of cardioembolic stroke with an accuracy of 86 percent. Ultimately, Ramoni envisions doctors using it as a diagnostic tool: a patient's genetic information would simply be entered into the model, which would correlate and analyze the data and output an overall probability of stroke, based on the stroke-related SNPs in the patient's genome. "It sounds like magic," says Ramoni. "But it's just a piece of technology. It gives hope that we will be able to predict early on whether someone is at risk of getting stroke, and allow you to convince them to make life changes."
"The next step is to get more SNPs," Ramoni adds. "These analyses looked at only 1,313 out of 3.3 million known SNPs. Even a million SNPs would cover the vast majority of the genome. We would get much better predictions."

Ramoni also says that by identifying all the genetic variants that modulate the risk of stroke, it could provide insight into its mechanisms and provide targets for future drugs. He is currently refining the model and believes that this technology could be used to predict inherited risk of many other conditions.

Michele Sale, PhD of the University of Virginia, and Blanca Himes, PhD, of CHIP, were coauthors on the paper. This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke, and National Center for Research Resources), the Mallinckrodt GCRC at Massachusetts General Hospital and the Deane Institute of Integrative Research in Stroke and Atrial Fibrillation.

Children's Hospital Boston




  Cardioembolic stroke: an update. (Review Article).(medical research; includes tables and related article "Key Points"): An article from: Southern Medical Journal
by Roger E. Kelley (Author), Alireza Minagar (Author)


This digital document is an article from Southern Medical Journal, published by Southern Medical Association on April 1, 2003. The length of the article is 6384 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Cardioembolic stroke: an update. (Review Article).(medical research; includes tables and related article "Key Points")
Author: Roger E. Kelley
Publication: Southern Medical Journal (Refereed)
Date: April 1, 2003
Publisher: Southern Medical Association
Volume: 96 Issue: 4 Page: 343(7)

Distributed by Thomson...

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