Association of ACE I/D Polymorphism with Essential Hypertension in South-Asian Populations: Gender-Bias in Indian Populations—Evidence from Case-Control and Meta-Analysis Studies

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Abstract

Introduction

The role of Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) intron-16 I/D polymorphism (rs4646994) in essential hypertension (EH) is contradictory in South Asian populations. The study objectives were to test the correlation of rs4646994 polymorphism with EH in the North-Indian population of Jammu and to perform a meta-analysis to validate its role in South-Asian populations.

Methodology

A total of 422 cases and 395 controls were genotyped in the original analysis. Pooled analysis was performed on 4987 cases and 5302 controls following the PRISMA and STREGA guidelines. SPSS v25.0 and web-based tools were used for statistical analyses.

Results

Our original case-control study revealed a statistically significant association between the rs4646994 polymorphism and EH, with the D allele being the risk allele. The observed significance level was higher when the recessive genetic model was tested [OR=1.68(95%CI:1.16–2.43), P=0.006]. Interestingly, only males carrying the DD genotype were at significantly higher odds of developing EH [OR=2.68(95%CI:1.58–4.53), P<0.0001]. The meta-analysis further corroborated an increased risk for EH in the presence of DD genotype in the South-Asian populations [OR=1.48 (95%CI:1.35–1.62), P<0.0001] and largely supported the gender-wise differences in Indian populations, with males at relatively higher risk.

Conclusion

Our results provide strong evidence supporting the role of rs4646994 polymorphism in EH in South-Asian populations, particularly Indians.

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