Literature DB >> 34636470

Associations between alcohol use and accelerated biological ageing.

Sunniva M K Bøstrand1,2, Kadi Vaher1,3, Laura de Nooij1, Matthew A Harris1, James H Cole4,5,6, Simon R Cox7, Riccardo E Marioni8, Daniel L McCartney8, Rosie M Walker8,9, Andrew M McIntosh1, Kathryn L Evans8, Heather C Whalley1, Robyn E Wootton10,11, Toni-Kim Clarke1.   

Abstract

Harmful alcohol use is a leading cause of premature death and is associated with age-related disease. Biological ageing is highly variable between individuals and may deviate from chronological ageing, suggesting that biomarkers of biological ageing (derived from DNA methylation or brain structural measures) may be clinically relevant. Here, we investigated the relationships between alcohol phenotypes and both brain and DNA methylation age estimates. First, using data from UK Biobank and Generation Scotland, we tested the association between alcohol consumption (units/week) or hazardous use (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test [AUDIT] scores) and accelerated brain and epigenetic ageing in 20,258 and 8051 individuals, respectively. Second, we used Mendelian randomisation (MR) to test for a causal effect of alcohol consumption levels and alcohol use disorder (AUD) on biological ageing. Alcohol use showed a consistent positive association with higher predicted brain age (AUDIT-C: β = 0.053, p = 3.16 × 10-13 ; AUDIT-P: β = 0.052, p = 1.6 × 10-13 ; total AUDIT score: β = 0.062, p = 5.52 × 10-16 ; units/week: β = 0.078, p = 2.20 × 10-16 ), and two DNA methylation-based estimates of ageing, GrimAge (units/week: β = 0.053, p = 1.48 × 10-7 ) and PhenoAge (units/week: β = 0.077, p = 2.18x10-10 ). MR analyses revealed limited evidence for a causal effect of AUD on accelerated brain ageing (β = 0.118, p = 0.044). However, this result should be interpreted cautiously as the significant effect was driven by a single genetic variant. We found no evidence for a causal effect of alcohol consumption levels on accelerated biological ageing. Future studies investigating the mechanisms associating alcohol use with accelerated biological ageing are warranted.
© 2021 The Authors. Addiction Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Generation Scotland; Mendelian randomisation; UK Biobank; alcohol use; brain ageing; epigenetic ageing

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34636470     DOI: 10.1111/adb.13100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addict Biol        ISSN: 1355-6215            Impact factor:   4.093


  3 in total

1.  Alcohol use disorder is associated with DNA methylation-based shortening of telomere length and regulated by TESPA1: implications for aging.

Authors:  Jeesun Jung; Daniel L McCartney; Josephin Wagner; Daniel B Rosoff; Melanie Schwandt; Hui Sun; Corinde E Wiers; Luana Martins de Carvalho; Nora D Volkow; Rosie M Walker; Archie Campbell; David J Porteous; Andrew M McIntosh; Riccardo E Marioni; Steve Horvath; Kathryn L Evans; Falk W Lohoff
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2022-06-15       Impact factor: 15.992

2.  Advanced brain age in deployment-related traumatic brain injury: A LIMBIC-CENC neuroimaging study.

Authors:  Emily L Dennis; Brian A Taylor; Mary R Newsome; Maya Troyanskaya; Tracy J Abildskov; Aaron M Betts; Erin D Bigler; James Cole; Nicholas Davenport; Timothy Duncan; Jessica Gill; Vivian Guedes; Sidney R Hinds; Elizabeth S Hovenden; Kimbra Kenney; Mary Jo Pugh; Randall S Scheibel; Pashtun-Poh Shahim; Robert Shih; William C Walker; J Kent Werner; Gerald E York; David X Cifu; David F Tate; Elisabeth A Wilde
Journal:  Brain Inj       Date:  2022-02-05       Impact factor: 2.167

3.  Commentary on Whitsel et al.: Smoking, alcohol use and the brain- the challenge of answering causal questions.

Authors:  Jorien L Treur
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2022-01-25       Impact factor: 7.256

  3 in total

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