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Mendelian randomization study of smoking, alcohol, and coffee drinking in relation to Parkinso's disease

Authors :
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Bioinformatics Core (R. Schneider Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Clinical & Experimental Neuroscience (Krüger Group) [research center]
JPND [sponsor]
Domenighetti, Cloe
Sugier, Pierre Emmanuel
Sreelatha, Ashwin Ashok Kumar
Schulte, Claudia
Grover, Sandeep
Mohamed, Oceane
Portugal, Berta
May, Patrick
Bobbili, Dheeraj Reddy
Radivojkov-Blagojevic, Milena
Lichtner, Peter
Singleton, Andrew B.
Hernandez, Dena G.
Edsall, Connor
Mellick, George D.
Zimprich, Alexander
Pirker, Walter
Rogaieva, Ekaterina
Lang, Anthony E.
Koks, Sulev
Taba, Pille
Lesage, Suzanne
Brice, Alexis
Corvol, Jean-Christophe
Chartier-Hardin, Marie-Christophe
Mutez, Eugenie
Brockmann, Kathrin
Deutschländer, Angela B.
Hadjigeorgiou, Georges M.
Dardiotis, Efthimos
Stefanis, Leonidas
Simitsi, Athina Maria
Valente, Enza-Maria
Petrucci, Simona
Duga, Stefano
Straniero, Letizia
Zecchinelli, Anna
Pezzoli, Gianni
Brighina, Laura
Ferrarese, Carlo
Annesi, Grazia
Quattrone, Andrea
Gagliardi, Monica
Matsuo, Hirotak
Kawamura, Yusuke
Hattori, Nobutaka
Nishioka, Kenya
Chung, Sun Ju
Kim, Yun Joong
Kolber, Pierre
van de Warrenburg, Bart Pc
Bloom, Bastiaan R.
Aasly, Jan
Toft, Mathias
Pihlstrom, Lasse
Guedes, Leonor Correia
Ferreira, Joaquim J.
Bardien, Soraya
Carr, Jonathan
Tolosa, Eduardo
Ezquerra, Mario
Pastor, Pau
Diez-Farien, Monica
Wirdefeldt, Karin
Pedersen, Nancy L.
Ran, Caroline
Belin, Andrea C.
Puschmann, Andreas
Hellberg, Clara
Clarke, Carl E.
Morrison, Karen E.
Tan, Manuela
Krainc, DImitri
Burbulla, Lena F.
Farrer, Matt J.
Krüger, Rejko
Gasser, Thomas
Sharma, Manu
Elbaz, Alexis
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Bioinformatics Core (R. Schneider Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Clinical & Experimental Neuroscience (Krüger Group) [research center]
JPND [sponsor]
Domenighetti, Cloe
Sugier, Pierre Emmanuel
Sreelatha, Ashwin Ashok Kumar
Schulte, Claudia
Grover, Sandeep
Mohamed, Oceane
Portugal, Berta
May, Patrick
Bobbili, Dheeraj Reddy
Radivojkov-Blagojevic, Milena
Lichtner, Peter
Singleton, Andrew B.
Hernandez, Dena G.
Edsall, Connor
Mellick, George D.
Zimprich, Alexander
Pirker, Walter
Rogaieva, Ekaterina
Lang, Anthony E.
Koks, Sulev
Taba, Pille
Lesage, Suzanne
Brice, Alexis
Corvol, Jean-Christophe
Chartier-Hardin, Marie-Christophe
Mutez, Eugenie
Brockmann, Kathrin
Deutschländer, Angela B.
Hadjigeorgiou, Georges M.
Dardiotis, Efthimos
Stefanis, Leonidas
Simitsi, Athina Maria
Valente, Enza-Maria
Petrucci, Simona
Duga, Stefano
Straniero, Letizia
Zecchinelli, Anna
Pezzoli, Gianni
Brighina, Laura
Ferrarese, Carlo
Annesi, Grazia
Quattrone, Andrea
Gagliardi, Monica
Matsuo, Hirotak
Kawamura, Yusuke
Hattori, Nobutaka
Nishioka, Kenya
Chung, Sun Ju
Kim, Yun Joong
Kolber, Pierre
van de Warrenburg, Bart Pc
Bloom, Bastiaan R.
Aasly, Jan
Toft, Mathias
Pihlstrom, Lasse
Guedes, Leonor Correia
Ferreira, Joaquim J.
Bardien, Soraya
Carr, Jonathan
Tolosa, Eduardo
Ezquerra, Mario
Pastor, Pau
Diez-Farien, Monica
Wirdefeldt, Karin
Pedersen, Nancy L.
Ran, Caroline
Belin, Andrea C.
Puschmann, Andreas
Hellberg, Clara
Clarke, Carl E.
Morrison, Karen E.
Tan, Manuela
Krainc, DImitri
Burbulla, Lena F.
Farrer, Matt J.
Krüger, Rejko
Gasser, Thomas
Sharma, Manu
Elbaz, Alexis
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background:Previous studies showed that lifestyle behaviors (cigarette smoking, alcohol, coffee) are inversely associated with Parkinson’s disease (PD). The prodromal phase of PD raises the possibility that these associations may be explained by reverse causation. Objective:To examine associations of lifestyle behaviors with PD using two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) and the potential for survival and incidence-prevalence biases. Methods:We used summary statistics from publicly available studies to estimate the association of genetic polymorphisms with lifestyle behaviors, and from Courage-PD (7,369 cases, 7,018 controls; European ancestry) to estimate the association of these variants with PD. We used the inverse-variance weighted method to compute odds ratios (ORIVW) of PD and 95%confidence intervals (CI). Significance was determined using a Bonferroni-corrected significance threshold (p = 0.017). Results:We found a significant inverse association between smoking initiation and PD (ORIVW per 1-SD increase in the prevalence of ever smoking = 0.74, 95%CI = 0.60–0.93, p = 0.009) without significant directional pleiotropy. Associations in participants ≤67 years old and cases with disease duration ≤7 years were of a similar size. No significant associations were observed for alcohol and coffee drinking. In reverse MR, genetic liability toward PD was not associated with smoking or coffee drinking but was positively associated with alcohol drinking. Conclusion:Our findings are in favor of an inverse association between smoking and PD that is not explained by reverse causation, confounding, and survival or incidence-prevalence biases. Genetic liability toward PD was positively associated with alcohol drinking. Conclusions on the association of alcohol and coffee drinking with PD are hampered by insufficient statistical power.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1290711681
Document Type :
Electronic Resource