| Literature DB >> 25979724 |
Eveline Nüesch1,2, Caroline Dale1, Tom M Palmer3,4, Jon White5, Brendan J Keating6,7,8, Erik Pa van Iperen9,10, Anuj Goel11, Sandosh Padmanabhan12, Folkert W Asselbergs13,10,14, W M Verschuren, C Wijmenga, Y T Van der Schouw, N C Onland-Moret15, Leslie A Lange16, G K Hovingh17, Suthesh Sivapalaratnam17, Richard W Morris18, Peter H Whincup19, Goya S Wannamethe18, Tom R Gaunt20,21, Shah Ebrahim1, Laura Steel6, Nikhil Nair6, Alexander P Reiner22, Charles Kooperberg23, James F Wilson24,25, Jennifer L Bolton24, Stela McLachlan24, Jacqueline F Price24, Mark Wj Strachan26, Christine M Robertson24, Marcus E Kleber27, Graciela Delgado27, Winfried März28, Olle Melander29, Anna F Dominiczak12, Martin Farrall11, Hugh Watkins11, Maarten Leusink30,31, Anke H Maitland-van der Zee30, Mark Ch de Groot30,31, Frank Dudbridge1, Aroon Hingorani32, Yoav Ben-Shlomo21, Debbie A Lawlor20,21, A Amuzu, M Caufield, A Cavadino, J Cooper, T L Davies, F Drenos, J Engmann, C Finan, C Giambartolomei, R Hardy, S E Humphries, E Hypponen, M Kivimaki, D Kuh, M Kumari, K Ong, V Plagnol, C Power, M Richards, S Shah, T Shah, R Sofat, P J Talmud, N Wareham, H Warren, J C Whittaker, A Wong, D Zabaneh33, George Davey Smith20,21, Jonathan C Wells34, David A Leon1,35, Michael V Holmes14,36,37, Juan P Casas1,14.
Abstract
Background: We investigated causal effect of completed growth, measured by adult height, on coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke and cardiovascular traits, using instrumental variable (IV) Mendelian randomization meta-analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 25979724 PMCID: PMC5841831 DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyv074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Epidemiol ISSN: 0300-5771 Impact factor: 7.196
Figure 1.Meta-analysis pooled estimates for the association between deciles of the allele score and adult height. Presented are pooled differences in mean adult height with corresponding 95% confidence intervals as compared with the 5th decile, derived from fixed-effect meta-analysis. N, numbers analysed in each decile.
Figure 2.Meta-analysis pooled causal effects for a 6.5-cm increase in adult height on the risk of cardiovascular disease. Odds ratios and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) are estimated from fixed-effect meta-analysis of instrumental variable (IV) estimates from individual studies. Hazard ratios are taken from estimates published by the Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration (ERFC). Effect estimates are per 6.5 cm increase in adult height. An estimate below 1 indicates that increasing adult height decreases the risk of cardiovascular events.
Meta-analysis pooled estimates derived from instrumental variable analysis for a 6.5-cm increase in adult height on cardiovascular traits. Traits are sorted according to the magnitude of the association observed with adult height
| Characteristic | No studies/ participants | Difference per SD in trait for a 6.5-cm increase in height (95% CI) | Heterogeneity, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FVC | 6/11129 | 0.30 (0.20, 0.41) | <0.001 | 0% (0.774) |
| FEV1 | 6/11131 | 0.26 (0.15, 0.36) | <0.001 | 0% (0.735) |
| Non-HDL cholesterol | 17/41477 | –0.12 (–0.17, –0.06) | <0.001 | 32% (0.102) |
| Triglycerides | 17/42117 | –0.10 (–0.16, –0.05) | <0.001 | 0% (0.513) |
| Body mass index | 20/54099 | –0.10 (–0.15, –0.05) | <0.001 | 30% (0.100) |
| C-reactive protein | 15/35538 | –0.07 (–0.13, –0.00) | 0.042 | 0% (0.761) |
| Systolic blood pressure | 19/52345 | –0.05 (0.10, 0.00) | 0.064 | 0% (0.467) |
| Fasting glucose | 18/40451 | –0.04 (–0.10, 0.01) | 0.127 | 13% (0.302) |
| HDL cholesterol | 18/43030 | 0.02 (–0.03, 0.08) | 0.432 | 33% (0.089) |
Results from instrumental variable analyses are derived from 2-stage least-squares regression and pooled using fixed-effects meta-analysis.
FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; FVC, forced vital capacity; HDL, high-density lipoprotein.
aEffects of triglycerides and C-reactive protein are estimated after log-transformation. A negative difference indicates that levels of traits decrease with an increase in adult height.