Periodic Reporting for period 1 - EpiHope (Epigenetic biomarkers for prediction of vascular complications and response to treatment in subjects with diabetes)
Berichtszeitraum: 2016-06-01 bis 2018-05-31
On the other hand, T2D increases the risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality. However, it is not known why some diabetic individuals develop these complications whereas others not. Hence, we aimed to identify blood-based epigenetic biomarkers that successfully predict coronary events and stroke in T2D subjects. Notably, our epigenetic biomarkers will provide a useful tool to identify T2D subjects at high risk of developing CVD to prevent at an early stage the progression to a macrovascular event. In fact, prevention is possible since early intensive glycemic control of T2D reduce in the long-term the number of macrovascular complications.
Overall, the identified epigenetic biomarkers of clinical relevance from this project predicting metformin response and macrovascular complications in people with T2D could provide a valuable tool for personalized medicine.
We have identified 25 epigenetic markers that could predict response to metformin in drug naïve subjects with T2D. When a methylation risk score was generated based on these markers, it could better predict metformin response than the individual markers. Moreover, we observed that these epigenetic markers might have a role in metabolically relevant tissues for T2D, since they showed differential methylation and gene expression between diabetics and non-diabetics in human adipose tissue, pancreatic islets, skeletal muscle and/or liver.
We found ~500 epigenetic markers that could predict macrovascular complications in newly diagnosed T2D individuals. We have observed that the identified epigenetic biomarkers improved the ROC curve compared to just known clinical risk factors (age, sex, lipid profile, smoking and the use of antihypertensives, statins and diabetes medication).
Replication of these findings is still needed in additional individuals and we are in the processing of analysing these results. For disseminating the results, two publications are planned during 2019 in high-impact journals.
This research shows that epigenetics could be a promising biomarker in T2D treatment and macrovascular complications although replication and further research is needed to translate our identified epigenetic biomarkers findings to T2D patients in the clinics.