Angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensinogen gene polymorphisms are non-randomly distributed in oral contraceptive-induced hypertension

2001 
Objectives and methods: Oral contraceptives (OC) usage increases serum angiotensinogen levels to three to five times normal and about 5% of these women develop arterial hypertension. The genetic contribution to this susceptibility to OC-induced hypertension is poorly understood. We have analyzed the genotypes of 149 hypertensive and 101 normotensive women using oral contraceptives, for three genetic polymorphisms in genes of the renin-angiotensin system: an insertion/deletion (I/ D) in the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) gene, the T235M polymorphism of the angiotensinogen gene (AGT) and a point mutation in its promoter. Results: After cessation of oral contraception the mean arterial pressures of the hypertensive women were separable into two non-overlapping groups; 88 of the women remained hypertensive and 61 returned to normal blood pressure. Both groups of hypertensive women had a similarly higher frequency of hypertensive relatives than the normotensive women, but were otherwise similar. The 235T allele of AGT was significantly increased in frequency in the 61 oral contraceptive-inducible hypertensive women compared with the controls and the 88 women that remained hypertensive. The ACE I/D genotypes were similarly distributed within the three groups of women, but were distinctly non-random in the oral contraceptive-induced hypertensive women when they were also classified by AGT genotype. Conclusion: This statistical interaction of genotype frequencies suggests that the genetic basis of susceptibility to OC-induced hypertension is complex.
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