DNA damage and arterial hypertension. A systematic review and meta-analysis.

8OHdG DNA strand break damage arterial hypertension cardiovascular disease comet assay gammaH2AX

Journal

Biomedical papers of the Medical Faculty of the University Palacky, Olomouc, Czechoslovakia
ISSN: 1804-7521
Titre abrégé: Biomed Pap Med Fac Univ Palacky Olomouc Czech Repub
Pays: Czech Republic
ID NLM: 101140142

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Oct 2023
Historique:
medline: 2 11 2023
pubmed: 2 11 2023
entrez: 2 11 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Oxidative DNA damage markers (8OHdG, comet assay, gammaH2AX) are becoming widely used in clinical cardiology research. To conduct this review of DNA damage in relation to hypertension in humans, we used databases (e.g. PubMed, Web of Science) to search for English-language publications up to June 30, 2022 and the terms: DNA damage, comet assay, gammaH2AX, 8OHdG, strand breaks, and arterial hypertension. Exclusion criteria were: children, absence of relevant controls, extra-arterial hypertensive issues, animal, cell lines. From a total of 79526, 15 human studies were selected. A total of 902 hypertensive patients (pts): (comet: N=418 pts; 8OHdG: N=484 pts) and 587 controls (comet: N=203; 8OHdG: N=384) were included. DNA damage was significantly higher in hypertensive pts than healthy controls (comet 26.6±11.0 vs 11.7±4.07 arbitrary units /A.U./; P<0.05 and 8OHdG 13.1±4.12 vs 6.97±2.67 ng/mg creatinine; P<0.05) confirmed with meta-analysis for both. Greater DNA damage was observed in more adverse cases (concentric cardiac hypertrophy 43.4±15.4 vs 15.6±5.5; sustained/untreated hypertension 31.4±12.1 vs 14.2±5/35.0±5.0 vs 25.0 ±5.0; non-dippers 39.2±15.5 vs 29.4±11.1 A.U.; elderly 14.9±4.5 vs 9.3±4.1 ng/mg creatinine; without carvedilol 9.1±4.2 vs 5.7±3.9; with coronary heart disease 0.5±0.1 vs 0.2±0.1 ng/mL) (P<0.05) confirmed with meta-analysis. DNA damage correlated strongly positively with serum glycosylated haemoglobin (r=0.670; P<0.05) and negatively with total antioxidant status (r=-0.670 to -0.933; P<0.05). This is the first systematic review with meta-analysis showing that oxidative DNA damage was increased in humans with arterial hypertension compared to controls.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37916467
doi: 10.5507/bp.2023.044
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

Auteurs

Radka Hazukova (R)

Department of Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, University Hospital Olomouc and Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University Olomouc, Czech Republic.
Department of Internal Medicine, Pardubice Regional Hospital, a.s., Pardubice, Czech Republic.
Department of Cardiology and Internal medicine (Profi-Kardio, s.r.o.), Horice v Podkrkonosi, Czech Republic.

Martina Rezacova (M)

Department of Medical Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Kralove, Charles University, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic.

Miloslav Pleskot (M)

Department of Cardiology and Internal medicine (Profi-Kardio, s.r.o.), Horice v Podkrkonosi, Czech Republic.

Zdenek Zadak (Z)

Departments of Research and Development, University Hospital, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic.

Eva Cermakova (E)

Department of Medical Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Kralove, Charles University, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic.

Milos Taborsky (M)

Department of Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, University Hospital Olomouc and Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University Olomouc, Czech Republic.

Classifications MeSH