The causal effect of adult height on late-life handgrip strength: The Singapore Chinese Health Study.

Xuling Chang, Kevin Yiqiang Chua, Chih Chuan Shih, Jieqi Chen, Ai Shan Lee, Patrick Tan, Ling Wang, Jianjun Liu, Chew-Kiat Heng, Jian-Min Yuan, Chiea Chuen Khor, Rajkumar Dorajoo, Woon-Puay Koh
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Abstract

Background: Adult height has been associated with handgrip strength, which is a surrogate marker of physical frailty. However, it is uncertain if this association is causative or due to confounding bias.

Methods: We evaluated pairwise associations among handgrip strength, adult height and genetically determined height [using a polygenic score (PGS) for height in a mediation framework and a two-sample Mendelian randomisation approach] by means of multivariable regression model using a prospective cohort of Chinese living in Singapore. We additionally evaluated pathway enrichments of height-related genes in relation to increased handgrip strength to discover common biological mechanisms underlying associations of genetically determined height with handgrip strength.

Results: Height PGS exhibited a positive association with handgrip strength at late life after adjusting for midlife body weight and other baseline exposures (cigarette smoking, education and physical activity status, P=1.2×10-9). Approximately 66.4% of the total effect of height PGS on handgrip strength was mediated through adult height (βindirect-effect=0.034, Pindirect-effect=1.4×10-40). Two-sample Mendelian randomisation evaluations showed a consistent causal relationship between increased height and increased handgrip strength in late life (P between 6.6×10-4 and 3.9×10-18), with insignificant horizontal pleiotropic effects (PMR-Egger  intercept=0.853). Pathway analyses of genes related to both increased adult height and handgrip strength revealed enrichment in ossification and adipogenesis pathways (Padj between 0.034 to 6.8×10-4).

Conclusions: The study highlights on a potentially causal effect between increased adult height and increased handgrip strength at late life, which may be explained by related biological processes underlying preservation of muscle mass and strength in ageing.

成人身高对晚年握力的因果效应:新加坡华人健康研究
背景:成人身高与手握力有关,而手握力是身体虚弱的替代指标。然而,目前还不能确定这种关联是因果关系还是混杂偏差所致:我们利用居住在新加坡的华人前瞻性队列,通过多变量回归模型评估了手握力、成人身高和遗传决定的身高之间的成对关联(在中介框架中使用身高的多基因评分(PGS)和双样本孟德尔随机方法)。此外,我们还评估了身高相关基因与手握力增加的通路富集情况,以发现遗传决定的身高与手握力相关的共同生物学机制:在调整了中年体重和其他基线暴露(吸烟、教育和体育锻炼状况,P=1.2×10-9)后,身高PGS与晚年手握力呈正相关。身高 PGS 对手握力量的总影响中,约有 66.4% 是通过成人身高介导的(β间接效应=0.034,间接效应=1.4×10-40)。双样本孟德尔随机化评估显示,身高增加与晚年手握力增加之间存在一致的因果关系(P 介于 6.6×10-4 和 3.9×10-18 之间),横向多效应不显著(PMR-Egger 截距=0.853)。对成年身高和握力增加相关基因的通路分析表明,骨化和脂肪生成通路富集(Padj 在 0.034 至 6.8×10-4 之间):这项研究强调了成年身高增加与晚年手握力增加之间可能存在的因果效应,这可能是由于在衰老过程中肌肉质量和力量保持的相关生物过程造成的。
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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