Heavier smoking may lead to a relative increase in waist circumference: evidence for a causal relationship from a Mendelian randomisation meta-analysis. The CARTA consortium.


Autoria(s): Morris R.W.; Taylor A.E.; Fluharty M.E.; Bjørngaard J.H.; Åsvold B.O.; Elvestad Gabrielsen M.; Campbell A.; Marioni R.; Kumari M.; Korhonen T.; Männistö S.; Marques-Vidal P.; Kaakinen M.; Cavadino A.; Postmus I.; Husemoen L.L.; Skaaby T.; Ahluwalia T.V.; Treur J.L.; Willemsen G.; Dale C.; Wannamethee S.G.; Lahti J.; Palotie A.; Räikkönen K.; McConnachie A.; Padmanabhan S.; Wong A.; Dalgård C.; Paternoster L.; Ben-Shlomo Y.; Tyrrell J.; Horwood J.; Fergusson D.M.; Kennedy M.A.; Nohr E.A.; Christiansen L.; Kyvik K.O.; Kuh D.; Watt G.; Eriksson J.G.; Whincup P.H.; Vink J.M.; Boomsma D.I.; Davey Smith G.; Lawlor D.; Linneberg A.; Ford I.; Jukema J.W.; Power C.; Hyppönen E.; Jarvelin M.R.; Preisig M.; Borodulin K.; Kaprio J.; Kivimaki M.; Smith B.H.; Hayward C.; Romundstad P.R.; Sørensen T.I.; Munafò M.R.; Sattar N.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

OBJECTIVES: To investigate, using a Mendelian randomisation approach, whether heavier smoking is associated with a range of regional adiposity phenotypes, in particular those related to abdominal adiposity. DESIGN: Mendelian randomisation meta-analyses using a genetic variant (rs16969968/rs1051730 in the CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 gene region) as a proxy for smoking heaviness, of the associations of smoking heaviness with a range of adiposity phenotypes. PARTICIPANTS: 148 731 current, former and never-smokers of European ancestry aged ≥16 years from 29 studies in the consortium for Causal Analysis Research in Tobacco and Alcohol (CARTA). PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Waist and hip circumferences, and waist-hip ratio. RESULTS: The data included up to 66 809 never-smokers, 43 009 former smokers and 38 913 current daily cigarette smokers. Among current smokers, for each extra minor allele, the geometric mean was lower for waist circumference by -0.40% (95% CI -0.57% to -0.22%), with effects on hip circumference, waist-hip ratio and body mass index (BMI) being -0.31% (95% CI -0.42% to -0.19), -0.08% (-0.19% to 0.03%) and -0.74% (-0.96% to -0.51%), respectively. In contrast, among never-smokers, these effects were higher by 0.23% (0.09% to 0.36%), 0.17% (0.08% to 0.26%), 0.07% (-0.01% to 0.15%) and 0.35% (0.18% to 0.52%), respectively. When adjusting the three central adiposity measures for BMI, the effects among current smokers changed direction and were higher by 0.14% (0.05% to 0.22%) for waist circumference, 0.02% (-0.05% to 0.08%) for hip circumference and 0.10% (0.02% to 0.19%) for waist-hip ratio, for each extra minor allele. CONCLUSIONS: For a given BMI, a gene variant associated with increased cigarette consumption was associated with increased waist circumference. Smoking in an effort to control weight may lead to accumulation of central adiposity.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_9CE30F110D2A

isbn:2044-6055 (Electronic)

pmid:26264275

doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008808

isiid:000363479100074

http://my.unil.ch/serval/document/BIB_9CE30F110D2A.pdf

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_9CE30F110D2A3

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

BMJ Open, vol. 5, no. 8, pp. e008808

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article