Title | Vitamin D and cause-specific vascular disease and mortality: a Mendelian randomisation study involving 99,012 Chinese and 106,911 European adults |
Authors | Huang, Tao Afzal, Shoaib Yu, Canqing Guo, Yu Bian, Zheng Yang, Ling Millwood, Iona Y. Walters, Robin G. Chen, Yiping Chen, Ningyu Gao, Ruqin Chen, Junshi Clarke, Robert Chen, Zhengming Ellervik, Christina Nordestgaard, Borge G. Lv, Jun Li, Liming Chen, Junshi Chen, Zhengming Clarke, Robert Collins, Rory Guo, Yu Li, Liming Lv, Jun Peto, Richard Walters, Robin Avery, Daniel Boxall, Ruth Bennett, Derrick Chang, Yumei Chen, Yiping Chen, Zhengming Clarke, Robert Du, Huaidong Gilbert, Simon Hacker, Alex Hill, Mike Holmes, Michael Iona, Andri Kartsonaki, Christiana Kerosi, Rene Kong, Ling Kurmi, Om Lancaster, Garry Lewington, Sarah Lin, Kuang McDonnell, John Millwood, Iona Nie, Qunhua Radhakrishnan, Jayakrishnan Ryder, Paul Sansome, Sam Schmidt, Dan Sherliker, Paul Sohoni, Rajani Stevens, Becky Turnbull, Iain Walters, Robin Wang, Jenny Wang, Lin Wright, Neil Yang, Ling Yang, Xiaoming Bian, Zheng Guo, Yu Han, Xiao Hou, Can Lv, Jun Pei, Pei Liu, Chao Tan, Yunlong Yu, Canqing Pang, Zengchang Gao, Ruqin Li, Shanpeng Wang, Shaojie Liu, Yongmei Du, Ranran Zang, Yajing Cheng, Liang Tian, Xiaocao Zhang, Hua Zhai, Yaoming Ning, Feng Sun, Xiaohui Li, Feifei Lv, Silu Wang, Junzheng Hou, Wei Zeng, Mingyuan Jiang, Ge Zhou, Xue Yang, Liqiu He, Hui Yu, Bo Li, Yanjie Xu, Qinai Kang, Quan Guo, Ziyan Wang, Dan Hu, Ximin Chen, Jinyan Fu, Yan Fu, Zhenwang Wang, Xiaohuan Weng, Min Guo, Zhendong Wu, Shukuan Li, Yilei Li, Huimei Fu, Zhifang Wu, Ming Zhou, Yonglin Zhou, Jinyi Tao, Ran Yang, Jie Su, Jian Liu, Fang Zhang, Jun Hu, Yihe Lu, Yan Ma, Liangcai Tang, Aiyu Zhang, Shuo Jin, Jianrong Liu, Jingchao Tang, Zhenzhu Chen, Naying Huang, Ying Li, Mingqiang Meng, Jinhuai Pan, Rong Jiang, Qilian Lan, Jian Liu, Yun Wei, Liuping Zhou, Liyuan Wang, Ningyu Chen Ping Meng, Fanwen Qin, Yulu Wang, Sisi Wu, Xianping Zhang, Ningmei Chen, Xiaofang Zhou, Weiwei Luo, Guojin Li, Jianguo Chen, Xiaofang Zhong, Xunfu Liu, Jiaqiu Sun, Qiang Ge, Pengfei Ren, Xiaolan Dong, Caixia Zhang, Hui Mao, Enke Wang, Xiaoping Wang, Tao Zhang, Xi Zhang, Ding Zhou, Gang Feng, Shixian Chang, Liang Fan, Lei Gao, Yulian He, Tianyou Sun, Huarong He, Pan Hu, Chen Zhang, Xukui Wu, Huifang He, Pan Yu, Min Hu, Ruying Wang, Hao Qian, Yijian Wang, Chunmei Xie, Kaixu Chen, Lingli Zhang, Yidan Pan, Dongxia Gu, Qijun Huang, Yuelong Chen, Biyun Yin, Li Liu, Huilin Fu, Zhongxi Xu, Qiaohua Xu, Xin Zhang, Hao Long, Huajun Li, Xianzhi Zhang, Libo Qiu, Zhe |
Affiliation | Peking Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Hlth Sci Ctr, 38 Xueyuan Rd, Beijing 100191, Peoples R China Peking Univ, Key Lab Mol Cardiovasc Sci, Minist Educ, Beijing, Peoples R China Herlev & Gentofte Hosp Copenhagen, Dept Clin Biochem, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Copenhagen, Denmark Herlev & Gentofte Hosp Copenhagen, Copenhagen Gen Populat Study, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Copenhagen, Denmark Chinese Acad Med Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China Univ Oxford, Clin Trial Serv Unit, Nuffield Dept Populat Hlth, Oxford, England Univ Oxford, Epidemiol Studies Unit CTSU, Nuffield Dept Populat Hlth, Oxford, England Liuzhou Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, NCDs Prevent & Control Dept, Liuzhou, Peoples R China Qingdao Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Qingdao, Shandong, Peoples R China China Natl Ctr Food Safety Risk Assessment, Beijing, Peoples R China Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Copenhagen City Heart Study, Frederiksberg Hosp, Copenhagen, Denmark Univ Copenhagen, Fac Hlth & Med Sci, Copenhagen, Denmark Peking Univ, Inst Environm Med, Beijing, Peoples R China Int Coordinating Ctr, Oxford, England Natl Coordinating Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China Qingdao CDC, 10 Reg Coordinating Ctr, Qingdao, Shandong, Peoples R China Licang CDC, Qingdao, Shandong, Peoples R China Heilongjiang Prov CDC, Qingdao, Shandong, Peoples R China Nangang CDC, Harbin, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China Hainan Prov CDC, Haikou, Hainan, Peoples R China Meilan CDC, Haikou, Hainan, Peoples R China Jiangsu Prov CDC, Yangzhou, Jiangsu, Peoples R China Suzhou CDC, Suzhou, Jiangsu, Peoples R China Liuzhou CDC, Liuzhou, Guangxi, Peoples R China Sichuan Prov CDC, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China Pengzhou CDC, Pengzhou, Sichuan, Peoples R China Maiji CDC, Tianshui, Gansu, Peoples R China Huixian CDC, Huixian, Henan, Peoples R China Zhejiang Prov CDC, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, Peoples R China Tongxiang CDC, Tongxiang, Peoples R China Hunan Prov CDC, Changsha, Hunan, Peoples R China Liuyang CDC, Liuyang, Henan, Peoples R China |
Keywords | Mendelian randomisation Vitamin D Cardiovascular diseases Lipids Causal effect |
Issue Date | 2019 |
Publisher | BMC MEDICINE |
Abstract | BackgroundRandomised control trials and genetic analyses have demonstrated that vitamin D or 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) levels may not play a causal role in the development of cardiovascular disease. However, it is unclear if 25(OH)D is causally associated with cause-specific vascular disease and lipids. Therefore, we examined the causal association of 25(OH)D with myocardial infarction, stroke, ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke, subarachnoid haemorrhage, intracerebral haemorrhage, and lipid levels among both Chinese and Europeans.MethodsWe used a Mendelian randomisation (MR) design in the China Kadoorie Biobank, the Copenhagen City Heart Study, and the Copenhagen General Population Study. The 25(OH)D-related genetic variants in the CYP2R1 and DCHR7 genes were genotyped in 99,012 Chinese adults and 106,911 Danish adults.ResultsIn Chinese adults, plasma 25(OH)D levels were not significantly associated with cause-specific vascular disease or mortality, with the exception of intracerebral haemorrhage (HR, 1.09 [95% CI, 1.01,1.18] per 25nmol/L higher plasma 25(OH)D). In Europeans, plasma 25(OH)D levels were inversely associated with all types of vascular diseases and mortality. However, MR analysis did not demonstrate causal associations of genetically increased 25(OH)D levels with cause-specific vascular diseases, or mortality in both Chinese and European adults. In addition, each 25nmol/L higher 25(OH)D was observationally associated with lower total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels, but higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Likewise, MR analysis showed that 25(OH)D levels were not causally associated with lipids in both Chinese and European adults after Bonferroni correction.ConclusionsWe found no evidence to support that genetically increased 25(OH)D was associated with a lower risk of ischaemic stroke, intracerebral haemorrhage, subarachnoid haemorrhage, and lipid levels in both Chinese and European adults. These results suggest that the inverse associations of vitamin D with vascular disease could be the result of confounding. |
URI | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/545689 |
ISSN | 1741-7015 |
DOI | 10.1186/s12916-019-1401-y |
Indexed | SCI(E) EI |
Appears in Collections: | 公共卫生学院 分子心血管学教育部重点实验室 |