Fig. 1: Interplay of monogenic and polygenic risk for coronary artery disease. | Nature Communications

Fig. 1: Interplay of monogenic and polygenic risk for coronary artery disease.

From: Polygenic background modifies penetrance of monogenic variants for tier 1 genomic conditions

Fig. 1

a Risk of coronary artery disease by monogenic and polygenic risk strata (case-control study; n = 12,852). Carriers and noncarriers were stratified into three groups according to their polygenic score—low, intermediate, or high defined as the lowest quintile, the middle three quintiles, and the highest quintile of the polygenic score distribution, respectively. The odds ratio was assessed in a logistic regression model with age, sex, and the first four principal components of ancestry as covariates. Noncarriers with intermediate polygenic score served as the reference group. The black boxes indicate the adjusted odds ratio. The horizontal lines around the black boxes indicate the 95% confidence intervals. b Predicted odds ratio for coronary artery disease in each percentile (dots) of the polygenic score distribution for carriers (blue) and noncarriers (black) of familial hypercholesterolemia variants in the cohort study derived from the UK Biobank (n = 48,812). Noncarriers with median polygenic score served as the reference group. c Predicted probability of coronary artery disease by age 75 years in each percentile (dots) of the polygenic score distribution for carriers (blue) and noncarriers (black) of familial hypercholesterolemia variants in the cohort study derived from the UK Biobank (n = 48,812). The shaded area around the dots represents the 95% confidence interval. The horizontal dashed lines show the probability of disease for people with average polygenic risk score. FH familial hypercholesterolemia. p-values in the figure were estimated by the Wald Test. Statistical significance was set at p < .05, and two-sided p values were used.

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