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Predictive Human Genomics Is Here
Thanks to breakthroughs in genomics testing, physicians now have tools for true preventive medicine. Gene chips and genomics test panels can predict one’s predisposition towards many serious -- and often preventable -- genetic diseases and allow doctors to modify gene expression through precise, targeted, individualized interventions.
Published on KurzweilAI.net May 29, 2002
The monumental accomplishment of decoding the human genome is
nearly complete. The results of work of the official government-sponsored
Human Genome Project together with the efforts of private firms
such as Celera and Human Genome Sciences has created a true inflection
point in the curve of medical history. The human genome, arguably
The Rosetta Stone of the human body, is presently undergoing intense
scrutiny by scientists in nearly every country in the world. The
potential benefits of these efforts for improving human health and
well-being are incalculable.
"The greatest payoff from understanding the human genome
is likely to be an illumination of the molecular pathogenesis of
disorders that are currently poorly understood and for which treatments
are …frequently sub-optimal….Genomics offers … the
greatest opportunity for development of targeted therapy since the
development of antibiotics,"1 according to Frank
S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. of the National Human Genome Research Institute,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.
Historically, previous medical disciplines have dealt largely
with the after-effects of an individual's genetic inheritance.
Genomics and these other new disciplines, on the other hand, look
directly at the genes themselves. They look at an individual's genetically
programmed biochemical pathways of life under conditions of health
and disease. For the first time ever, physicians have the tools
to help their patients employ truly preventive medicine.
Genomics may help scientists find ways of modifying human biochemistry
long before a genetically predisposed disease has a chance to appear.2
Rifling through the dusty pages of medical history, however, it
seems axiomatic that our powers for diagnosing diseases has preceded
our ability to offer effective treatment for them. This also seems
true on the new genomics frontier as well.
Testing for genetic diseases
Enter predictive genomics, the identification of the genetic predisposition
of individuals to certain diseases, which is the diagnostic arm
of the new genetics-based paradigm. This field has already advanced
to the point that a number of sophisticated diagnostic tests are
currently available to help predict one's predisposition towards
many serious (although preventable or modifiable) genetic diseases.
The fact that proteomics and other therapeutic modalities are still
in their infancy is in keeping with the historical diagnostics-first-therapeutics-later
tradition. Progress in the sister specialties of proteomics, bioinformatics,
and systems biology should eventually provide ever more effective
therapeutic modalities for patients with these genetic predispositions
in the years ahead.
Roger Williams, M.D. in the 1950's, introduced the concept of biochemical
individuality: that every individual possesses a specific and unique
biochemical blueprint.3 Until a few years ago, however,
discovering what constitutes our biochemical individuality has been
hit-and-miss at best, the empiric result of decades of careful trial
and error.
For example, after many years of observation, one person may have
noticed that he has more energy when eating protein for breakfast,
that eating strawberries gives him a rash, and that he gets a headache
if he consumes artificial sweeteners. Yet, another person feels
sluggish if he has too much protein for breakfast, but seems to
have no problems with strawberries or artificial sweeteners. Truly,
"One man's meat is another man's poison," for we are all
biochemically unique.
As a direct result of data from The Human Genome Project, however,
we have begun to obtain much more information regarding our biochemical
individuality in a rapid, quantifiable and affordable fashion. The
tools of modern science can now accomplish in minutes what once
took years of trial and error. One company, Orchid Diagnostics,
currently offers products and services to help physicians and laboratories
perform HLA genotyping (to assist with matching of donor transplant
organs with recipients), disease susceptibility testing and immunogenetics.
Each of their systems is capable of performing over 500,000 genotype
analyses per day.4
Genomics testing may soon be able to predict precisely what foods
are best for us, prescribe individualized exercise and other lifestyle
prescriptions, and recommend a personalized list of supplements,
neutraceuticals, and prescription drugs for maximum health and disease
avoidance. This will all be based on an examination of our personal
genetic makeup.
One often hears of life being compared to a game of cards. An individual
born with a serious genetic disease such as Cystic Fibrosis or Huntington's
Disease is thought of having been dealt a "bad hand."
Conversely, the 105-year old we read about who attributes her longevity
to "Eating a jelly donut for breakfast and smoking two packs
of cigarettes every day" would clearly seem to have started
life with exceptionally good cards.
The Mendelian concept of "genetic determinism" - that
the genes with which we are born will determine our fate in an absolute
fashion - has given way to a newer hypothesis of "genomic relativism."
Genes don't determine what diseases we will acquire, they
merely predispose us to them. The implications of this simple
concept for the future of healthcare and preventive medicine are
far-reaching.
While there are a few genes that do condemn an individual to an
almost certain fate (such as the Cystic Fibrosis or Huntington's
Chorea genes mentioned above), these constitute only a tiny fraction
of the 35,000 or so genes that comprise the entirety of the human
genome. The overwhelming majority of the time, our genes merely
predispose us to disease conditions that will either manifest
or not later in life depending on the lifestyle choices we made
earlier on. We end up reaping later in life what we ourselves sowed
in our youth.
Continuing with our gaming analogy, the cards we are dealt represent
our genetic heritage. We call this sum total of our genetic makeup,
the totality of our inherited DNA, our "genotype."
Our genetic heritage (our starting hand) expresses itself throughout
the course of our lifetimes as a consequence of the environment
in which we live and the lifestyle choices that we make (how well
we play). Like any good card game, it is this combination of luck
(genetic makeup) plus skill (lifestyle choices and environmental
factors) that makes for an exciting outcome. This concept of genomic
relativism is at once enabling and terrifying. The age-old of
battle of predestination vs. free will is being fought on the front
lines of our nuclear DNA. And it is now looking like very little
about our future health is absolutely predestined or predetermined.
Doctors now realize that almost all human diseases result from
the interaction of genetic susceptibility with modifiable
environmental factors. In the overwhelming majority of cases, genetic
variations do not cause disease; rather, they influence a person's
susceptibility to disease as a result of lifestyle choices and environmental
factors. It's not "nature" vs. "nurture," but
nature (genetic heritage) and nurture (lifestyle/ environment).
Compared with looking at one's "genotype," it's more
compelling to watch how the genetic code is translated, i.e., the
"phenotype" of one's genetic expression, particularly
the subtle differences between individuals. More than 99% of human
DNA is identical among all people. Yet, it is this fraction of one
percent that is different that creates all the variety of life and
ensures that no two humans (other than identical twins who have
precisely the same DNA) will be exactly alike.
This fraction of a percent difference in DNA from person to person
is of critical importance. In the course of replicating itself billions
and trillions of times, as it must do to create all the cells and
tissues of the body, our DNA undergoes numerous opportunities for
errors. These mistakes or imperfections in our DNA most commonly
take the form of what are called point mutations, deletions
or translocations. These variations are collectively known
as "polymorphisms" (literally, multiple shapes). Our biochemical
individuality derives largely from these polymorphisms, 100,000
or so of which have been found to date.
Specific genetic polymorphisms that involve only a single nucleotide
(DNA subunit -- cytosine, thymine, adenine, or guanine) are the
most common variant, and such "single nucleotide polymorphisms"
(SNPs, pronounced "snips") are extremely common in the
population at large. It is estimated that 50% of people have at
least one of the known SNPs.
By convention, rare single-nucleotide imperfections in the genetic
code are referred to as mutations. When a specific mutation is so
common that it affects more than 1% of the population, it is called
a polymorphism or SNP. These polymorphisms are important because
they can change the manner in which the body functions, and, in
some cases, predispose us (or make us more resistant) to specific
diseases.
It is axiomatic of the new theory of genomic relativism that just
because we have a genetic variation that predisposes us to a certain
disease, say heart disease, breast cancer, rheumatoid arthritis
or osteoporosis, it does not mean that we are predestined to get
that disease some day. The fundamental equation of predictive genomics
is:
Genetic predisposition + environment + modifiable lifestyle
choices = phenotypic expression
Predictive genomics testing signals the beginning of truly individualized
healthcare. Physicians can now begin to evaluate each patient's
unique genetic predispositions and then develop and implement a
carefully targeted, customized plan for intervention years before
pre-disease imbalances or disease symptoms begin to appear.
Almost all of the most common disabling and deadly degenerative
diseases of our time, including cardiovascular disease, cancer,
Alzheimer's Disease and adult-onset diabetes,8 are thought
to be the result of interaction between genetic and environmental
factors.
By evaluating possible genetic variants in a patient, we will be
able to:
- Identify "hidden" gene mutations that may promote
chronic disease
- Gain earlier advanced warning of disease susceptibility in
each patient
- Determine cumulative risk associated with specific, easily
identified mutations
- Intervene much earlier in the pre-disease state
Modify gene expression through more precise, targeted, individualized
interventions
- Identify key target areas on which to focus follow-up
- Monitor therapeutic effectiveness of intervention strategies
with laboratory testing"5
With clinical insight such as this, physicians will gain a deeper
understanding of disease processes and be able to develop more rapid
and efficacious interventions.
Predictive genomics attempts to identify the most significant single
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in individuals. This is done to
predict the likelihood that an individual is predisposed to develop
a particular chronic disease or functional imbalance and evaluate
the risk that this disease or imbalance might appear under circumstances
of particular environmental or lifestyle choices.
Predictive genomics may make medical practice in the near future
radically different from the medicine of today. Just as individuals
will no longer be forced to play the poker game of life blindfolded,
neither will their doctors. Rather than having to guess what lifestyle
choices to make, individuals may finally get to look at the owner's
manual for their particular bodies. Instead of relying on randomized
studies involving large patient populations, doctors will have access
to sophisticated diagnostic and therapeutic tools individualized
for each of their patients.
We may find such freedom enabling, but terrifying as well. The
scary part will be that individuals will be required to take ever-greater
personal responsibility for maintaining their own health and longevity.
The more powerful and dangerous the genetic idiosyncrasies with
which an individual is born, the greater the responsibility on that
individual to modify their environment, diet and lifestyle to attenuate
the expression of that potentially harmful genetic material. As
a result, physicians will move laterally into positions as co-workers
or counselors with their patients, rather than as paternalistic
"medicine men" or even "healers" who possess
and dispense wondrous "cures."
The same SNP that can be harmful to an individual in one environment
can be beneficial to that same individual under different circumstances.
For example, a SNP that has historically afforded individuals a
better chance of survival during periods of famine or near starvation
may render those persons significantly more prone to obesity under
conditions of excess or even adequate calories. The nearly ubiquitous
incidence of obesity among modern day Pima Indians is testimony
to the variegated expression of the same genetic mutation under
different environmental circumstances.6
The power of predictive genomics to alter medical practice and
allow physicians to practice true preventive medicine seems awesome.
However, despite the signs in the road warning of "Wonders
Ahead," I predict that only a small percentage of patients
who might be helped by predictive genomics testing will take advantage
of its availability within the next few years.
The inherent conservatism of the medical community as well as the
intrinsic reluctance of the population at large to accept dramatic
changes in their worldview will force a delay in popular implementation
of this paradigm shift. Most physicians and patients will be likely
to continue wandering in the barren but familiar landscape of the
prehistoric genetic desert for a number of years before arriving
at The Promised Land of Predictive Genomics.
The groups most likely to avail themselves more quickly of the
new diagnostic information emanating from Predictive Genomics testing
will include:
- Proactive patients who seek not merely good health, but optimal
health and want to bring their risks to an absolute minimum.
-
Patients who have a family history of potentially serious diseases
that are easily tested with current technologies, such as heart
disease, Alzheimer's, colon cancer, osteoporosis, etc.
- Patients who have proven refractory to conventional treatments.
I predict that this radical shift in medical diagnostics will take
several years to filter throughout the medical community and enter
common usage among the general populace. For widespread acceptance
to occur, physicians and patients alike will be forced to take giant
strides in their conceptualizations of why we get sick. The very
idea that patients can be tested before the fact for the
diseases to which they are predisposed represents a very big first
step.
Taking it to the next level and realizing that patients themselves
are largely responsible for their own fates may take an even greater
stretch of the imagination. It will definitely represent a major
paradigm shift in thinking for patients and physicians alike. Such
a drastic alteration in our concept of health and disease--that
we are each largely responsible for our destiny--will make many
folks very uncomfortable indeed.
Testing panels
At this time (mid-2002), several genomics testing panels are commercially
available. Each of these panels tests for a dozen or so SNPs at
a cost of a few hundred dollars per panel. Within a few years, thanks
to the Law of Accelerating Returns,7 for the same few
hundreds of dollars, panels will be available that test for thousands
of genetic predispositions.
We will also soon have access to "DNA chips" that will
test for most, if not all, of the 100,000 or so SNPs currently identified.8
9 One company, Affymetrix, is currently making gene chips
available to doctors for analyzing our DNA and tracking gene expression
in tumors and other tissue they are sufficiently optimistic about
their prospects that their toll-free number is (800) DNA-CHIP. Affymetrix
and other companies have developed silicon-coated glass wafers that
can be subdivided into over 150,000 distinct locations, so we will
be able to detect polymorphisms on tens of thousands of genes in
a matter of minutes.
The road to these "DNA chips" may have a few hurdles
to cross first, at least before this information is available at
low cost. It seems that a few years ago, the overwhelming majority
of information found in DNA didn't seem to bear any relationship
to the genes themselves and came to be known as "junk DNA."
Researchers have since learned that these "non-coding"
regions of the DNA are not "junk" at all, but contain
vital information. Many SNPs, in fact, are found in these non-coding
DNA segments.10
A small Australian biotech company called Genetic Technologies
of Melbourne was among the first to realize that SNPs found outside
of the genes themselves may be just as important as genetic polymorphisms
themselves and registered a number of patents in the 1990's relating
to this discovery. Genetic Technologies currently seems dedicated
to cashing in on these patents and has threatened to sue companies
who try to use this information without first paying large royalties.11
Without discussing the legality or morality of such operations,
genomic testing could easily end up be much more costly as a result
of these and similar patents and lawsuits. With our current knowledge
and abilities, however, even if the massive amounts of data that
could be found on DNA chips were available, it would likely produce
little beyond information overload. We need to wait for the bioinformatics
scientists to catch up.
At the present time, because of both the cost considerations and
our limited abilities to make meaningful sense of the data, today's
clinicians need to apply limiting criteria to determine which polymorphisms
it makes most sense to screen. In so doing, we can establish which
SNPs should be included as part of a comprehensive preventive health
program that incorporates predictive genomic testing. Presently,
the numbers seem quite manageable.
Of the 100,000 SNPs currently identified, only 8,000 seem relevant
to health. These 8,000 polymorphisms are relevant because they exert
a significant effect on our biochemistry and physiology. Frankly,
we don't know what the other 92,000 do … at least not yet.
Given our current knowledge of the human genome, only polymorphisms
that exist in a significant percentage of the population are likely
to be identified and evaluated in a cost-effective manner. Polymorphisms
of sufficient prevalence among the population at large slice
the pool down to about 300 SNPs.
It seems both prudent and ethical to test primarily for polymorphisms
whose effects are modifiable through the use of currently available
interventions. Finding out that a patient has a genetic defect that
cannot be modified by any presently available therapy may create
as much anxiety as good (although patients should have the right
to know if they wish). About 100 SNPs are currently modifiable
through interventions such as diet, lifestyle, nutritional supplements,
and prescription pharmaceuticals.
In an ideal situation, the effects of our interventions should
be easily measurable through presently available functional
laboratory testing. In the year 2002, this brings the total of relevant,
prevalent, modifiable and measurable genetic
polymorphisms down to the easily manageable number of a few dozen
or so.
Genomic test panels
The more common of these single nucleotide polymorphisms have been
assembled into genomic test panels. Currently, four predictive genomic
panels are commercially available for physician use:12
a cardiac risk panel, an osteoporosis risk panel, an immune function
panel and a detoxification panel.
The Cardiovascular Risk Panel identifies genetic
single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with increased risk of
developing coronary artery disease, other vascular diseases, Alzheimer's
Disease, and hypertension. Risk factors measured include markers
for inflammation, folic acid defects, iron storage problems, blood
coagulation abnormalities, and cholesterol regulation defects, as
well as cardio-protective markers. The information from such profiling
will provide the ability to predict heart disease decades before
symptoms appear.13
The Osteoporosis Risk Panel identifies SNPs associated
with increased risk of developing bone loss. Risk factors include
defects in calcium and vitamin D metabolism, parathyroid hormone
action, abnormal collagen synthesis, and chronic inflammation.
The Immune Panel identifies SNPs associated with
increased risk of developing immune dysfunction. Risk factors include
altered production and activity of cytokines such as interleukins
and Tissue Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-a) that may lead to inflammation
and altered immunity. These SNPs have been associated with increased
risk of asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, some types of cancers and
other diseases.
The Detoxification Panel identifies SNPs associated
with increased risk of developing detoxification defects, especially
with increased exposure to environmental and other toxins. Risk
factors include altered liver detoxification processes, including
defects in glutathione conjugation (the detoxifier molecule mentioned
in the sidebar below). Defects in the body's detoxification pathways
have been associated with increased risk for certain cancers, chronic
fatigue, multiple chemical sensitivity, and alcoholism.
Some patients may feel it worthwhile to screen with all four panels,
while others may prefer to pick and choose one or more of the panels
they feel are most relevant to them.
The testing procedure itself is very simple. Cells are collected
either by using a mouth rinse solution collected at the patient's
home or from a simple blood draw in the physician's office.
Many patients are understandably concerned about the confidentiality
of their genomics testing results. Manufacturers of the genomics
test panels have made the sage decision to address these issues
before problems occur and have concluded that genomics test results
require a higher level of security and confidentiality than other
test results. At the testing facility, genomics testing results
are protected by a security code that is disclosed only to the patient's
attending physician.14
It would be tragic for genomics test results to be used by agencies
such as insurance companies and HMOs to discriminate unfairly against
individuals who have been proactive in seeking to achieve better
health. So in most medical offices, copies of genomics test results
are not included with the patient's regular medical records, but
are kept in a separate secure location. This is done to ensure that
such information is not routinely available to insurance companies
who do not yet have sufficient experience with genomics testing
to understand the full implications of these results.
* * *
Just as I was preparing to finish this article (in fact, I had
only these concluding paragraphs to complete), I got the results
of my own genomics profile back from the lab. As is often the case
where hopes and dreams in life collide with reality, the outcome
of my tests was less ideal than I had hoped, but not as bad as I
had feared. I found out that I am among the 30% of the population
who carries the Apo E4 gene. While I haven't lost sleep over this
information, I have found these results disturbing. This information
has introduced a light chop onto the calm waters of my inner tranquility.
Luckily, though, I have the more common and less risky E3/E4 genotype,
not the distinctly more malevolent E4/E4. Yet, I now live with the
knowledge that my chances of developing Alzheimer's Disease at some
point in my life are 2-3 times average. From a purely statistical
point of view, the chance that a man my age with the E3/E4 genotype
will develop AD within the next 30 years is 14%.
All things considered, I am still glad I took this test. I found
I had other genetic risk factors as well. Now knowing precisely
what some of these risks are has stimulated me to be even more vigilant
in my health maintenance efforts. To help reduce my chance of developing
Alzheimer's Disease and some other diseases for which I find I am
at above average risk, I plan to reduce my consumption of saturated
fat significantly. I plan to eat more fish. I will also make some
modifications to the nutritional supplements I take.
But, knowing that all of the genetic risks that have been identified
for me are just that -- risks and not diseases -- gives me hope,
and also tools to keep some of these dreaded maladies at bay. So,
I am very glad that I took this test.
Predictive Genomics testing is here and it is available today.
It can provide previously unknowable genetic information personalized
to each individual. For additional information on specific single
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), see the site run by The
National Center for Biotechnology Information. Another excellent
resource is Office
of Genomics and Disease Prevention of The Center for Disease
Control (CDC).
For further information about Predictive Genomics, please see the
website for the genomics division of Great
Smokies Diagnostic Laboratory16 or visit my
website (Terry Grossman MD).
Genetic engineering disciplines
As a direct outgrowth of the Human Genome Project, a number of
new scientific disciplines have been created to help interpret and
capitalize on the voluminous amounts of data that is being generated
each day.
- Genomics is the study of the composition of genetic
material itself (the DNA in our genes and chromosomes)
- Proteomics is the study of proteins, both those found
naturally in the body and those created in the laboratory. Given
the capitalist imperative, in the private sector at least, there
is a bias in this field towards the production of proprietary
protein molecules that may have value in helping maintain optimal
health as well as treating disease
- Bioinformatics is the new discipline assigned the task
of developing techniques to gather and process all of this new
information
- Systems Biology is the study of how all of these systems
work together to form the inordinately complex, ineffably elegant,
and indescribably beautiful entity we call life
Genomics testing for cardiovascular conditions
I want to offer one practical example of the type of information
available through genomics testing. We will examine one specific
marker that is part of the Cardiovascular Genomics Profile -- the
apolipoprotein E (Apo E) polymorphisms. We will first discuss the
specific risks and benefits associated with the different Apo E
polymorphisms. Then, we will discuss how this information can result
in lifestyle recommendations, which can help an individual modify
the phenotypic expression of the more dangerous genotypes.
Apolipoproteins are carrier proteins responsible for the transport
of lipids such as fat and cholesterol throughout the bloodstream.
Since fat and cholesterol are oily substances that are not water-soluble,
they require specific carrier molecules to help move them from place
to place in the body.
One important lipid carrier protein, Apolipoprotein E, comes in
three main polymorphic flavors -- Apo E2, Apo E3 and Apo E4. These
three lipoproteins differ in the amino acids found at locations
112 and 158. Apo E2 has the amino acid cysteine at each of these
loci, while Apo E4 substitutes arginine in each location. The most
common type, Apo E3, has one of each, cysteine at site 112 and arginine
at site 158.17 These subtle differences produce significant
variations in how Apo E performs its duties of pick up and delivery
of lipid bundles. One isoform, Apo E2, performs its job of clearing
cholesterol from the arteries quite well, while Apo E4 is much less
efficient.
Every person possesses two copies of the Apo E gene, one inherited
from each parent. There are, thus, six possible combinations: E2/E2,
E3/E3, E4/E4, E2/E3, E2/E4 and E3/E4.
It is known that individuals who possess one or two copies of the
E4 polymorphism have an increased incidence of elevated cholesterol,
triglycerides and coronary heart disease.18 Of even greater
clinical significance, however, is the correlation between the presence
of Apo E4 and the incidence of Alzheimer's Disease (AD). The effect
of this polymorphism on AD is actually quite dramatic.
Individuals who do not have any copies of the Apo E4 allele have
only a 9% risk of developing AD by age 85. People with one copy
of the gene (the E3/E4 genotype carried by over 25% of the population)
have a 27% chance that they will develop AD by the same age. For
individuals who possess two copies (E4/E4), the risk of developing
Alzheimer's increases to 55% by the age of 80.19
Furthermore, the age at which dementia is diagnosed is much younger,
depending on the number of copies of Apo E4 carried: 84 years old
if one has no copies of E4, 75 years if one copy and a mean age
of 68 years in E4/E4 homozygotes.20
Pathological examination of brain tissue of Alzheimer's patients
reveals three main types of abnormalities: extracellular amyloid
plaques, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles, and vascular amyloid
deposits. It is probably no coincidence that Apo E4 has been immunochemically
linked to each of these types of deposits.
The Apo E2 gene, on the other hand, appears to confer some degree
of protection against development of AD, and patients with at least
one copy of the E2 allele have a 40-50% reduction in their Alzheimer's
risk.21 Apo E2 is not perfect, however, as some forms
of heart disease are more common in patients with this polymorphism.
All things considered, Apo E2 is a pretty good deal, however, and
it is not unlikely that our 105 year-old smoker mentioned above
was born with one or two copies of Apo E2. The Apo E3 form is the
most common, by far, (over 50% of the population is E3/E3) and affords
some protection against both heart disease and Alzheimer's.
In a large study of 12,709 male twins who were 62-73 years old,
the odds of developing AD was 17.7 for genotype E4/E4 versus E3/E3
(i.e., an almost 18-fold increased risk) and 13.8 for E4/E4 versus
all remaining genotypes. By contrast, the odds ratio for heterozygous
E3/E4 was only 2.76 versus E3/E3 and 2.01 versus all other genotypes.22
Although the Apo E4 allele is a potent risk factor for AD and may
be associated with other forms of dementia, the good news is that
most people who carry the Apo E4 gene still do not develop dementia,
and about one-half of people diagnosed with AD do not possess any
copies of the Apo E4 gene.23 In some studies, it has
been reported that the proportion of patients with dementia that
is attributable to the Apo E4 allele is estimated to be only 20%.24
Free radical damage appears to play a key role in the creation
of insoluble beta-amyloid, one of the hallmarks of AD pathophysiology.
Therefore, particularly for individuals who discover they carry
the Apo E4 gene, special efforts to limit free radical damage seem
prudent.25 Patients who have been identified as Apo E4
carriers would be advised to begin taking aggressive free radical
damage control measures, i.e., anti-oxidant and other therapies,
as early in life as possible.
The following practical recommendations are suggested for patients
carrying the Apo E4 genotype (although they could also be of value
for anyone):
- Vitamin and herbal agents which directly interact with
free radicals such as vitamin C, vitamin E, alpha lipoic acid
and coenzyme Q 10 should be taken daily.
- Pharmacological agents that may help reduce free radical
production in the brain include the monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor,
selegilene,26 and the hormones, melatonin and estrogen
(women only). Low-dose aspirin therapy (81 mg daily) may be prudent
as well.27 For patients unable to lower their lipid
levels despite dietary strategies, the nutrient policosanol is
of value. For patients who still require a prescription drug,
lorelco (available through compounding pharmacies) seems to work
better than other cholesterol lowering agents, although some specific
precautions must be followed when this medicationis used.
- Neutraceutical agents such as phosphatidylserine in fairly
large doses - such as 300 mg/day taken on a long-term basis -
has been shown to slow cognitive decline in Alzheimer's dementias.28
Acetyl-l-carnitine seems to have value as well.
- Lifestyle changes including stress management and regular
aerobic exercise have been found to be of value in preventing
the incidence of AD. 29,30
- Dietary modifications are warranted since we recall
that Apo E4 is also associated with elevated lipid levels. Suggestions
include an aggressive low-fat diet to help keep cholesterol
levels down, while lowering simple carbohydrates in the diet
(such as sugars and refined flour products) is often of benefit
to individuals with high triglycerides.
1 Collins, FS, Guttmacher AE. Genetics moves into
the medical mainstream. JAMA. 2001 Nov 14;286(18):2322-4
2 Flower J, Dreifus LS, Bove AA, Weintraub WS. Technological
Advances and the Next 50 Years of Cardiology. J Amer Coll Cardiol,
35:(4):1082-1091.
3 Williams, Roger J. Biochemical Individuality : The
Basis for the Genetotrophic Concept. New York: Keats, 1998.
4 http://www.orchid.com/products/lsg/products/uht.asp
5 http://www.genovations.com/overview.html
6 Coleman DL. Diabetes and obesity: thrifty mutants?
Nutr Rev 1978 May;36(5):129-32.
7 Kurzweil, Ray. The Age of Spiritual Machines. New
York: Viking, 1999, p.30.
8 Francis Collins, American College of Cardiology Annual
Scientific Session, New Orleans, March 1999.
9 Wu, Corinna. "The Incredible Shrinking Laboratory,"
Science News, 15 (8/15/98): 154, pp 104.
10 Roth FP, Hughes JD, Estep PW, Church GM. Finding
DNA regulatory motifs within unaligned noncoding sequences clustered
by whole-genome mRNA quantitation Nature Biotechnology
1998; 16: 939-45.
11 http://www.newscientist.com/news/print.jsp?id=ns99992280
12 These tests are available through Great Smokies
Diagnostics Laboratory www.gsdl.com.
13 "Genomic Medicine and Novel Molecular Therapies
in Cardiovascular Medicine," Victor Dzau, Bishop Lecture,
American College of Cardiology Annual Scientific Session, New
Orleans, March 1999.
14 http://www.genovations.com/patient_privacy.html
15 Bickeboller H, et al. Apolipoprotein E and Alzheimer
disease: genotype-specific risks by age and sex. Am J Hum Genet
1997 Feb;60(2):439-46.
16 Additional contact information for Great Smokies
Diagnostic Laboratory/Genovations™ is 63 Zillicoa Street;
Asheville, NC 28801 Ph: 1-800-522-4762 (8AM - 8PM EST) ; Fax:
1-828-252-9303 ; e-mail: cs@gsdl.com.
17 This is an oversimplification. For all of the many
Apo E amino acid substations possible, please visit the National
Library of Medicine website:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Omim/dispmim?107741#MAPPING
18 Eto M, et al. Familial hypercholesterolemia and
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KA, Beiser A, Wolf PA. Apolipoprotein E epsilon4 association with
dementia in a population-based study: The Framingham study. Neurology
1996 Mar;46(3):673-7
20 Kamboh MI. Apolipoprotein E polymorphism and susceptibility
to Alzheimer's disease. Hum Biol 1995 Apr; 67(2):195-215.
21 Farrer LA, Cupples LA, Haines JL, Hyman B, Kukull
WA, Mayeux R, Myers RH, Pericak-Vance MA, Risch N, van Duijn CM.
Effects of age, sex, and ethnicity on the association between
apolipoprotein E genotype and Alzheimer disease. A meta-analysis.
APOE and Alzheimer Disease Meta Analysis Consortium. JAMA
1997 Oct 22-29;278(16):1349-56
22 Breitner JC, Jarvik GP, Plassman BL, Saunders AM,
Welsh KA. Risk of Alzheimer disease with the epsilon4 allele for
apolipoprotein E in a population-based study of men aged 62-73
years. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 1998 Mar;12(1):40-4.
23 Myers RH, Schaefer EJ, Wilson PW, D'Agostino R,
Ordovas JM, Espino A, Au R, White RF, Knoefel JE, Cobb JL, McNulty
KA, Beiser A, Wolf PA. Apolipoprotein E epsilon4 association with
dementia in a population-based study: The Framingham study. Neurology
1996 Mar;46(3):673-7.
24 Slooter AJ, Cruts M, Kalmijn S, Hofman A, Breteler
MM, Van Broeckhoven C, van Duijn CM. Risk estimates of dementia
by apolipoprotein E genotypes from a population-based incidence
study: the Rotterdam Study. Arch Neurol 1998 Jul;55(7):964-8.
25 Retz W et al. Free radicals in Alzheimer's disease.
J Neural Transm Suppl 1998;54:221-36.
26 Rosler M, et al. Free radicals in Alzheimer's dementia:
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27 Pasinetti GM. Cyclooxygenase and inflammation in Alzheimer's
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28 Engel RR, et al. Double-blind cross-over study of
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E4. Atherosclerosis. 1990 Sep;84(1):49-53.
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29 Khalsa, Dharma Singh and Stauth, C. Brain Longevity.
New York: Warner Books, 1997.
30 Fletcher GF.The antiatherosclerotic effect of exercise
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