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Estimating dose-response relationships for vitamin D with coronary heart disease, stroke, and all-cause mortality: observational and Mendelian randomisation analyses

Authors :
Drechsler, Christiane
Bolland, Mark J.
Reid, Ian
Willeit, Johann
Schett, Georg
Santer, Peter
Sofat, Reecha
Taylor, Julie
Dale, Caroline
Prince, Richard L.
Ben-Shlomo, Yoav
Gallacher, John
Jensen, Gorm B.
Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth
Bojesen, Stig Egil
Benn, Marianne
Wulff, Anders B.
Krogh, Signe V.
Schierbeck, Louise Lind
Kaptoge, Stephen
Wareham, Nicholas
Schöttker, Ben
Zhu, Anna
Holleczek, Bernd
Dennison, Elaine
Jameson, Karen
Schleithoff, Stefanie Schulze
Frisch, Sabine
Linneberg, Allan
Skaaby, Tea
Kårhus, Line Lund
de Jongh, Renate T.
Visser, Marjolein
Dobnig, Harald
Robinson-Cohen, Cassianne
Siscovick, David S.
Kestenbaum, Bryan R.
McConnachie, Alex
Sattar, Naveed
Morrison, David
Lundqvist, Annamari
Cawthon, Peggy M.
Albertorio, Juan R.
Jukema, J Wouter
Trompet, Stella
Kearney, Patricia
Dörr, Marcus
Völzke, Henry
Nauck, Matthias
Rossing, Peter
Persson, Frederik
Marniemi, Jukka
Vazquez, Victoria
Sundström, Johan
Risérus, Ulf
Michaëlsson, Karl
Emberson, Jonathan
Leon, David
Kivimäki, Mika
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Background:\ud Randomised trials of vitamin D supplementation for cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality have generally reported null findings. However, generalisability of results to individuals with low vitamin D status is unclear. We aimed to characterise dose-response relationships between 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) concentrations and risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, and all-cause mortality in observational and Mendelian randomisation frameworks.\ud \ud Methods:\ud Observational analyses were undertaken using data from 33 prospective studies comprising 500 962 individuals with no known history of coronary heart disease or stroke at baseline. Mendelian randomisation analyses were performed in four population-based cohort studies (UK Biobank, EPIC-CVD, and two Copenhagen population-based studies) comprising 386 406 middle-aged individuals of European ancestries, including 33 546 people who developed coronary heart disease, 18 166 people who had a stroke, and 27 885 people who died. Primary outcomes were coronary heart disease, defined as fatal ischaemic heart disease (International Classification of Diseases 10th revision code I20-I25) or non-fatal myocardial infarction (I21-I23); stroke, defined as any cerebrovascular disease (I60-I69); and all-cause mortality.\ud \ud Findings:\ud Observational analyses suggested inverse associations between incident coronary heart disease, stroke, and all-cause mortality outcomes with 25(OH)D concentration at low 25(OH)D concentrations. In population-wide genetic analyses, there were no associations of genetically-predicted 25(OH)D with coronary heart disease, stroke, or all-cause mortality. However, for the participants with vitamin D deficiency (25[OH]D concentration

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22138587
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....1a9cb196e6f94ca396fc7c6ff357757b