Owing to the susceptibility of conventional observational studies to confounding factors and reverse causation,the causal association between cardiac function and frailty is unclear.We aimed to investigate whether car...Owing to the susceptibility of conventional observational studies to confounding factors and reverse causation,the causal association between cardiac function and frailty is unclear.We aimed to investigate whether cardiac function has causal effects on frailty.In this study,a two-sample Mendelian randomization(MR)study was conducted using genetic variants associated with cardiac function assessed by magnetic resonance imaging phenotypes as instrumental variables.Genetic variants asso-ciated with cardiac function by magnetic resonance imaging(including seven cardiac function phenotypes)and the frailty index(FI)were obtained from two large genome-wide association studies.MR estimates from each genetic instrument were combined using inverse variance weighted(IVW),weighted median,and MR‒Egger regression methods.We found that the increase in genetically determined stroke volume(beta-0.13,95%CI-0.16 to-0.10,p=1.39E-6),rather than other cardiac phenotypes,was associated with lower FI in MR analysis of IVW after Bonferroni correction.Sensitivity analyses examining potential bias caused by pleiotropy or reverse causality revealed similar findings(e.g.,intercept[SE],-0.008[0.011],p=0.47 by MR‒Egger intercept test).The leave-one-out analysis indicated that the association was not driven by single nucleotide polymorphisms.No evidence of heterogeneity was found among the genetic variants(e.g.,MR‒Egger:Q statistic=14.4,p=0.156).In conclusion,we provided evidence that improved cardiac function could contribute to reducing FI.These findings support the hypothesis that enhancing cardiac function could be an effective prevention strategy for frailty.展开更多
基金supported by National Key Research and Development Programme of China(2018YFC2000400,2018YFC2000400-3,2018YFC2002000)Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project(2017SHZDZX01).
文摘Owing to the susceptibility of conventional observational studies to confounding factors and reverse causation,the causal association between cardiac function and frailty is unclear.We aimed to investigate whether cardiac function has causal effects on frailty.In this study,a two-sample Mendelian randomization(MR)study was conducted using genetic variants associated with cardiac function assessed by magnetic resonance imaging phenotypes as instrumental variables.Genetic variants asso-ciated with cardiac function by magnetic resonance imaging(including seven cardiac function phenotypes)and the frailty index(FI)were obtained from two large genome-wide association studies.MR estimates from each genetic instrument were combined using inverse variance weighted(IVW),weighted median,and MR‒Egger regression methods.We found that the increase in genetically determined stroke volume(beta-0.13,95%CI-0.16 to-0.10,p=1.39E-6),rather than other cardiac phenotypes,was associated with lower FI in MR analysis of IVW after Bonferroni correction.Sensitivity analyses examining potential bias caused by pleiotropy or reverse causality revealed similar findings(e.g.,intercept[SE],-0.008[0.011],p=0.47 by MR‒Egger intercept test).The leave-one-out analysis indicated that the association was not driven by single nucleotide polymorphisms.No evidence of heterogeneity was found among the genetic variants(e.g.,MR‒Egger:Q statistic=14.4,p=0.156).In conclusion,we provided evidence that improved cardiac function could contribute to reducing FI.These findings support the hypothesis that enhancing cardiac function could be an effective prevention strategy for frailty.