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Self-reported and genetically predicted coffee consumption and smoking in dementia: A Mendelian randomization study.

Authors :
Nordestgaard, Ask T.
Nordestgaard, Børge G.
Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth
Juul Rasmussen, Ida
Bojesen, Stig E.
Source :
Atherosclerosis (00219150). May2022, Vol. 348, p36-43. 8p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Studies of self-reported coffee consumption and smoking on risk of dementia have shown results conflicting with two-sample Mendelian randomization studies. We tested the hypotheses that coffee consumption and smoking influence risk of dementia using observational and one-sample Mendelian randomization designs with individual level data. We included 114,551 individuals from two Danish general population cohorts (median age 58 years). First, we tested whether high self-reported coffee consumption/smoking were associated with risk of dementia. Second, whether genetically predicted high coffee consumption/smoking due to variation near CYP1A1/AHR/CHRNA3 genes were associated with risk of dementia. We observed 3,784 dementia events. Moderate self-reported coffee consumption was associated with low risk of all dementia and non-Alzheimer's dementia, with a similar trend for Alzheimer's disease. Genetically predicted high coffee consumption was associated with high risk of all dementia (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval] per +1 cup/day: 1.20 [1.01–1.42]), with a similar trend for non-Alzheimer's dementia (1.23 [0.95–1.53]). High self-reported smoking was associated with high risk of non-Alzheimer's dementia. High genetically predicted smoking was associated with a trend towards high risk of all dementia and Alzheimer's disease (hazard ratios per +1 pack-year: 1.04 [0.96–1.11]) and 1.06 [0.97–1.16]). Moderate self-reported coffee consumption was associated with low risk of all and non-Alzheimer's dementia, while high genetically predicted coffee consumption was associated with a trend towards the opposite. High self-reported smoking was associated with high risk of non-Alzheimer's dementia, with a similar trend for genetically predicted smoking on all dementia and Alzheimer's disease. [Display omitted] • Moderate self-reported coffee consumption was associated with low risk of dementia. • High genetic coffee consumption showed a trend towards high risk of some dementia. • High self-reported smoking was associated with some dementia. • High genetic smoking showed a trend towards high risk of dementia. • High coffee consumption and smoking are unlikely to protect against dementia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219150
Volume :
348
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atherosclerosis (00219150)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156999228
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2022.03.022