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Plasma Activity and Insertion/Deletion Polymorphism of Angiotensin I–Converting Enzyme
Author(s) -
Flavio Ribichini,
Giuseppe Steffenino,
Antonio Dellavalle,
Giuseppe Matullo,
Elena Colajanni,
Terenzio Camilla,
Antonello Vado,
Gabriella Benetton,
E Uslenghi,
Alberto Piazza
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/01.cir.97.2.147
Subject(s) - restenosis , medicine , genotype , angiotensin converting enzyme , endocrinology , fibrinogen , stenosis , allele , cardiology , gastroenterology , blood pressure , stent , gene , genetics , biology
Background —Tissue proliferation is almost invariably observed in recurrent lesions within stents, and ACE, a factor of smooth muscle cell proliferation, may play an important role. Plasma ACE level is largely controlled by the insertion/deletion (I/D ) polymorphism of the enzyme gene. The association among restenosis within coronary stents, plasma ACE level, and theI/D polymorphism is analyzed in the present prospective study.Methods and Results —One hundred seventy-six consecutive patients with successful, high-pressure, elective stenting of de novo lesions in the native coronary vessels were considered. At follow-up angiography, recurrence was observed in 35 patients (19.9%). Baseline clinical and demographic variables, plasma glucose and serum fibrinogen levels, lipid profile, descriptive and quantitative angiographic data, and procedural variables were not significantly different in patients with and without restenosis; mean plasma ACE levels (±SEM) were 40.8±3.5 and 20.7±1.0 U/L, respectively (P <.0001). Diameter stenosis percentage and minimum luminal diameter at 6 months showed statistically significant correlation with plasma ACE level (r =.352 and −.387, respectivelyP <.001). Twenty-one of 62 patients (33.9%) withD/D genotype, 13 of 80 (16.3%) withI/D genotype, and 1 of 34 (2.9%) withI/I genotype showed recurrence; the restenosis rate for each genotype is consistent with a codominant expression of the alleleD .Conclusions —In a selected cohort of patients, both theD/D genotype of the ACE gene, and high plasma activity of the enzyme are significantly associated with in-stent restenosis. Continued study with clinically different subsets of patients and various stent designs is warranted.

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