Associations between Potentially Modifiable Risk Factors and Alzheimer Disease: A Mendelian Randomization Study.
In: e1001841, 2015
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Zugriff:
BACKGROUND: Potentially modifiable risk factors including obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and smoking are associated with Alzheimer disease (AD) and represent promising targets for intervention. However, the causality of these associations is unclear. We sought to assess the causal nature of these associations using Mendelian randomization (MR). METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used SNPs associated with each risk factor as instrumental variables in MR analyses. We considered type 2 diabetes (T2D, NSNPs = 49), fasting glucose (NSNPs = 36), insulin resistance (NSNPs = 10), body mass index (BMI, NSNPs = 32), total cholesterol (NSNPs = 73), HDL-cholesterol (NSNPs = 71), LDL-cholesterol (NSNPs = 57), triglycerides (NSNPs = 39), systolic blood pressure (SBP, NSNPs = 24), smoking initiation (NSNPs = 1), smoking quantity (NSNPs = 3), university completion (NSNPs = 2), and years of education (NSNPs = 1). We calculated MR estimates of associations between each exposure and AD risk using an inverse-variance weighted approach, with summary statistics of SNP-AD associations from the International Genomics of Alzheimer's Project, comprising a total of 17,008 individuals with AD and 37,154 cognitively normal elderly controls. We found that genetically predicted higher SBP was associated with lower AD risk (odds ratio [OR] per standard deviation [15.4 mm Hg] of SBP [95% CI]: 0.75 [0.62-0.91]; p = 3.4 × 10(-3)). Genetically predicted higher SBP was also associated with a higher probability of taking antihypertensive medication (p = 6.7 × 10(-8)). Genetically predicted smoking quantity was associated with lower AD risk (OR per ten cigarettes per day [95% CI]: 0.67 [0.51-0.89]; p = 6.5 × 10(-3)), although we were unable to stratify by smoking history; genetically predicted smoking initiation was not associated with AD risk (OR = 0.70 [0.37, 1.33]; p = 0.28). We saw no evidence of causal associations between glycemic traits, T2D, BMI, or educational attainment and risk of AD (all p > 0.1). Potential limitations of this study include ...
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Associations between Potentially Modifiable Risk Factors and Alzheimer Disease: A Mendelian Randomization Study.
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Østergaard, SD ; Mukherjee, S ; Sharp, SJ ; Proitsi, P ; Lotta, LA ; Day, F ; Perry, JRB ; Boehme, KL ; Walter, S ; Kauwe, JS ; Gibbons, LE ; Alzheimer’s Disease Genetics Consortium ; Consortium, GERAD1 ; Consortium, EPIC-InterAct ; Larson, EB ; Powell, JF ; Langenberg, C ; Crane, PK ; Wareham, NJ ; Scott, RA ; Imperial College Trust |
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Zeitschrift: | e1001841, 2015 |
Veröffentlichung: | 2015 |
Medientyp: | academicJournal |
DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001841 |
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