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Phenotypic and pharmacogenetic evaluation of patients with thiazide-induced hyponatremia.

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posted on 2018-01-05, 16:18 authored by James S. Ware, Louise V. Wain, Sarath K. Channavajjhala, Victoria E. Jackson, Elizabeth Edwards, Run Lu, Keith Siew, Wenjing Jia, Nick Shrine, Sue Kinnear, Mahli Jalland, Amanda P. Henry, Jenny Clayton, Kevin M. O'Shaughnessy, Martin D. Tobin, Victor L. Schuster, Stuart Cook, Ian P. Hall, Mark Glover
Thiazide diuretics are among the most widely used treatments for hypertension, but thiazide-induced hyponatremia (TIH), a clinically significant adverse effect, is poorly understood. Here, we have studied the phenotypic and genetic characteristics of patients hospitalized with TIH. In a cohort of 109 TIH patients, those with severe TIH displayed an extended phenotype of intravascular volume expansion, increased free water reabsorption, urinary prostaglandin E2 excretion, and reduced excretion of serum chloride, magnesium, zinc, and antidiuretic hormone. GWAS in a separate cohort of 48 TIH patients and 2,922 controls from the 1958 British birth cohort identified an additional 14 regions associated with TIH. We identified a suggestive association with a variant in SLCO2A1, which encodes a prostaglandin transporter in the distal nephron. Resequencing of SLCO2A1 revealed a nonsynonymous variant, rs34550074 (p.A396T), and association with this SNP was replicated in a second cohort of TIH cases. TIH patients with the p.A396T variant demonstrated increased urinary excretion of prostaglandin E2 and metabolites. Moreover, the SLCO2A1 phospho-mimic p.A396E showed loss of transporter function in vitro. These findings indicate that the phenotype of TIH involves a more extensive metabolic derangement than previously recognized. We propose one mechanism underlying TIH development in a subgroup of patients in which SLCO2A1 regulation is altered.

Funding

This work was supported by an Academy of Medical Sciences grant for clinical lecturers (to JSW and MG), British Heart Foundation grant PG/09/089 (to KMO), the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Royal Brompton Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit (to JSW and SC), the Fondation Leducq (to JSW and SC), and the British Heart Foundation (to JSW and SC). MDT holds a Medical Research Council Senior Clinical Fellowship (G0902313). This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (grant numbers G510364 and G1000861). This research used the ALICE and SPECTRE High Performance Computing Facilities at the University of Leicester.

History

Citation

Journal of Clinical Investigation , 2017, 127 (9), pp. 3367-3374

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Clinical Investigation

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Investigation

issn

0021-9738

eissn

1558-8238

Acceptance date

2017-06-15

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2018-01-05

Publisher version

https://www.jci.org/articles/view/89812

Language

en