Genetic Liability to Cardiovascular Disease, Physical Activity, and Mortality: Findings from the Finnish Twin Cohort.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Laura Joensuu, Katja Waller, Anna Kankaanpää, Teemu Palviainen, Jaakko Kaprio, Elina Sillanpää
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Abstract

Purpose: We investigated whether longitudinally assessed physical activity (PA) and adherence specifically to World Health Organization PA guidelines mitigate or moderate mortality risk regardless of genetic liability to cardiovascular disease (CVD). We also estimated the causality of the PA-mortality association.

Methods: The study used the older Finnish Twin Cohort with 4897 participants aged 33 to 60 yr (54.3% women). Genetic liability to coronary heart disease and systolic and diastolic blood pressure was estimated with polygenic risk scores (PRS) derived from the Pan-UK Biobank ( N ≈ 400,000; >1,000,000 genetic variants). Leisure-time PA was assessed with validated and structured questionnaires three times during 1975 to 1990. The main effects of adherence to PA guidelines and the PRS × PA interactions were evaluated with Cox proportional hazards models against all-cause and CVD mortality. A cotwin control design with 180 monozygotic twin pairs discordant for meeting the guidelines was used for causal inference.

Results: During the 17.4-yr (mean) follow-up (85,136 person-years), 1195 participants died, with 389 CVD deaths. PRS (per 1 SD increase) were associated with a 17% to 24% higher CVD mortality risk but not with all-cause mortality except for the PRS for diastolic blood pressure. Adherence to PA guidelines did not show significant independent main effects or interactions with all-cause or CVD mortality. Twins whose activity levels adhered to PA guidelines over a 15-yr period did not have statistically significantly reduced mortality risk compared with their less active identical twin sibling. The findings were similar among high, intermediate, and low genetic risk levels for CVD.

Conclusions: The genetically informed Finnish Twin Cohort data could not confirm that adherence to PA guidelines either mitigates or moderates genetic CVD risk or causally reduces mortality risk.

心血管疾病、体育锻炼和死亡率的遗传责任:芬兰双胞胎队列的研究结果。
目的:我们研究了纵向评估的体力活动(PA)和特别遵守世界卫生组织体力活动指南的情况是否会减轻或缓和死亡风险,而与心血管疾病(CVD)的遗传易感性无关。我们还估算了体力活动与死亡率之间的因果关系:研究使用了年龄较大的芬兰双胞胎队列(FTC),共有 4897 名 33-60 岁的参与者(54.3% 为女性)。冠心病、收缩压和舒张压的遗传责任通过从泛英国生物库(N ≈ 400,000; > 1,000,000 遗传变异)中得出的多基因风险评分(PRSs)进行估算。1975 年至 1990 年期间,通过有效的结构化问卷对闲暇时间运动进行了三次评估。通过 Cox 比例危险模型评估了遵守休闲活动指南的主要影响以及 PRS × 休闲活动的相互作用对全因死亡率和心血管疾病死亡率的影响。为了推断因果关系,采用了同卵双生子对照设计,即 180 对单卵双生子在遵守指南方面不一致:在 17.4 年(平均)的随访期间(85 136 人年),有 1 195 名参与者死亡,其中 389 人死于心血管疾病。PRS高一个标准差,心血管疾病死亡风险就高17%-24%,但与全因死亡率无关,舒张压PRS除外。坚持体育锻炼指南与全因死亡率或心血管疾病死亡率之间没有显著的独立主效应或交互作用。在15年的时间里,活动量符合运动量指南的双胞胎与活动量较少的同卵双胞胎相比,其死亡风险并没有统计学意义上的显著降低。心血管疾病高、中、低遗传风险水平的研究结果相似:结论:遗传信息FTC数据不能证实,遵守PA指南可减轻或缓和遗传心血管疾病风险,或因果关系降低死亡风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
4.90%
发文量
2568
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise® features original investigations, clinical studies, and comprehensive reviews on current topics in sports medicine and exercise science. With this leading multidisciplinary journal, exercise physiologists, physiatrists, physical therapists, team physicians, and athletic trainers get a vital exchange of information from basic and applied science, medicine, education, and allied health fields.
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