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Stroke 2004-Feb

Prospective evaluation of the alcohol dehydrogenase gamma1/gamma2 gene polymorphism and risk of stroke.

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Robert Y L Zee
Paul M Ridker
Nancy R Cook

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Genetic polymorphism of the alcohol dehydrogenase type 3 gene (ADH1C) has recently been associated with reduced risk of myocardial infarction. However, data on risk of stroke are not available.

METHODS

We examined the possible association between the ADH1C gamma1/gamma2 polymorphism and risk of stroke in a prospective, nested case-control sample from the Physicians' Health Study of 14 916 apparently healthy men who were followed over a 12-year period. A total of 320 incident stroke cases and 550 age- and smoking-matched controls were genotyped.

RESULTS

All observed genotype frequencies were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The allele and genotype distributions of the polymorphism tested were similar between cases and controls, such that the relative risk of stroke was 1.04 for ADH1C gamma1/gamma2 (95% CI=0.85 to 1.28; P=0.65) assuming an additive mode of inheritance. Contrary to prior findings for myocardial infarction, no evidence of association was observed to suggest an effect modification of ADH1C genotypes with the level of alcohol consumption on the risk of stroke. Similar findings were observed in subgroup analysis restricted to ischemic events.

CONCLUSIONS

In this large, prospective study, we found little evidence that the ADH1C gamma1/gamma2 polymorphism is associated with risk of future stroke. These data raise the possibility of important pathologic differences in ischemia between the coronary and cerebral circulations.

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