Literature DB >> 31219597

Education and lung cancer: a Mendelian randomization study.

Huaqiang Zhou1,2,3, Yaxiong Zhang1,2,3, Jiaqing Liu4, Yunpeng Yang1,2,3, Wenfeng Fang1,2,3, Shaodong Hong1,2,3, Gang Chen1,2,3, Shen Zhao1,2,3, Zhonghan Zhang1,2,3, Jiayi Shen4, Wei Xian4, Yan Huang1,2,3, Hongyun Zhao1,2,3, Li Zhang1,2,3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We aimed to investigate whether more years spent in education are causally associated with a lower risk of lung cancer, through a two-sample Mendelian randomization study.
METHODS: The main analysis used publicly available genetic summary data from two large consortia [International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO) and Social Science Genetic Association Consortium (SSGAC)]. Genetic variants used as instrumental variables for years of education were derived from SSGAC. Finally, genetic data from three additional consortia (TAG, GLGC, GIANT) were analysed to investigate whether education could causally alter common lung cancer risk factors. The exposure was the genetic predisposition to higher levels of education, measured by 73 single nucleotide polymorphisms from SSGAC. The primary outcome was the risk of lung cancer (11 348 events in ILCCO). Secondary outcomes based on different histological subtypes were also examined. Analyses were performed using the package TwoSampleMR in R.
RESULTS: Genetic predisposition towards 3.6  years of additional education was associated with a 52% lower risk of lung cancer (odds ratio 0.48, 95% confidence interval 0.34 to 0.66; P = 1.02 × 10 - 5). Sensitivity analyses were consistent with a causal interpretation in which major bias from genetic pleiotropy was unlikely. The Mendelian randomization assumptions did not seem to be violated. Genetic predisposition towards longer education was additionally associated with less smoking, lower body mass index and a favourable blood lipid profile.
CONCLUSIONS: Our study indicated that low education is a causal risk factor in the development of lung cancer. Further work is needed to elucidate the potential mechanisms.
© The Author(s) 2019; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Education; Mendelian randomization; causality; lung cancer

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31219597     DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyz121

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


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