TitleVitamin D and cause-specific vascular disease and mortality: a Mendelian randomisation study involving 99,012 Chinese and 106,911 European adults
AuthorsHuang, 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
AffiliationPeking 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
KeywordsMendelian randomisation
Vitamin D
Cardiovascular diseases
Lipids
Causal effect
Issue Date2019
PublisherBMC MEDICINE
AbstractBackgroundRandomised 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.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/545689
ISSN1741-7015
DOI10.1186/s12916-019-1401-y
IndexedSCI(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 

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