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Clinical associations with a polygenic predisposition to benign lower white blood cell counts.

Jonathan D MosleyJohn P ShelleyAlyson L DicksonJacy ZanussiLaura L DanielNeil S ZhengLisa BastaracheWei-Qi WeiMingjian ShiGail P JarvikElisabeth A RosenthalAtlas KhanAlborz SherafatiIftikhar J KulloTheresa L WalunasJoseph T GlessnerHakon H HakonarsonNancy J CoxDan M RodenStephan G FrangakisBrett VanderwerffC Michael SteinSara L Van DriestScott C BorinsteinXiao-Ou ShuMatthew ZawistowskiCecilia P ChungVivian K Kawai
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Polygenic variation unrelated to disease contributes to interindividual variation in baseline white blood cell (WBC) counts, but its clinical significance is uncharacterized. We investigated the clinical consequences of a genetic predisposition toward lower WBC counts among 89,559 biobank participants from tertiary care centers using a polygenic score for WBC count (PGS WBC ) comprising single nucleotide polymorphisms not associated with disease. A predisposition to lower WBC counts was associated with a decreased risk of identifying pathology on a bone marrow biopsy performed for a low WBC count (odds-ratio = 0.55 per standard deviation increase in PGS WBC [95%CI, 0.30-0.94], p = 0.04), an increased risk of leukopenia (a low WBC count) when treated with a chemotherapeutic (n = 1724, hazard ratio [HR] = 0.78 [0.69-0.88], p = 4.0 × 10 -5 ) or immunosuppressant (n = 354, HR = 0.61 [0.38-0.99], p = 0.04). A predisposition to benign lower WBC counts was associated with an increased risk of discontinuing azathioprine treatment (n = 1,466, HR = 0.62 [0.44-0.87], p = 0.006). Collectively, these findings suggest that there are genetically predisposed individuals who are susceptible to escalations or alterations in clinical care that may be harmful or of little benefit.
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