Causal association of obesity-related anthropometric traits with myopia and the mediating role of educational attainment: a Mendelian randomization study.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 OPHTHALMOLOGY
International journal of ophthalmology Pub Date : 2024-11-18 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.18240/ijo.2024.11.15
Yi Lu, Can-Can Zhang, Run-Ting Ma, Yuan-Jing Li, Wen-Ping Li, Die-Wen-Jie Hu, Lian-Hong Zhou
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aim: To study the causal relationship between obesity-related anthropometric traits and myopia and the mediating role of educational attainment (EA).

Methods: Univariable Mendelian randomization (UVMR) was performed to evaluate the causal association between body mass index (BMI), height, waist-hip ratio (WHR, adjusted for BMI), and mean spherical equivalent (MSE). BMI was divided into fat and fat-free mass and included in multivariable Mendelian randomization (MVMR) to explore the roles of different BMI components in the causal relationship between BMI and MSE. A mediation analysis based on two-step Mendelian randomization (MR) was carried out. Specifically, UVMR was conducted to estimate the causal effect of BMI on EA. The direct effect of EA on MSE was estimated from MVMR. The mediation effect of EA in the BMI-EA-MSE model was calculated by the product of coefficients method. Expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL)-MR, reverse MR, and Linkage Disequilibrium Score Regression (LDSC) were performed to assess the robustness.

Results: Genetically predicted higher BMI had a positive total effect on MSE (βIVW=0.26 D, 95%CI=0.14 to 0.37 D, P<0.001), whereas there was no significant association between height, WHR, and MSE. Fat mass was found to play a significant role in the effect of body mass on MSE (βIVW=0.50 D, 95%CI=0.21 to 0.78 D, P=0.001), but there was no significant association between fat-free mass and MSE. The causal effect of BMI on EA was -0.14 (95%CI=-0.16 to -0.11, P<0.001), and the direct effect of EA on MSE was -0.63 D (95%CI=-0.81 to -0.44 D, P<0.001). The mediating effect of EA in the BMI-EA-MSE model was 0.09 D (95%CI=0.06 to 0.12 D), with a mediation proportion of 33% (95%CI=22.1% to 44.6%). No reverse causal associations were detected except for BMI on EA. The results of eQTL-MR and LDSC were consistent with each MR analysis.

Conclusion: Genetically predicted higher BMI decreases the degree of myopia with a 33% mediation proportion by EA, and fat mass provides a dominant protective role in body mass-myopia. As a supplement to previous observational studies, it provides strong evidence for the relationship between anthropometric traits and refractive errors and offers a theoretical basis for future measures to prevent and control myopia.

肥胖相关人体测量特征与近视的因果关系及教育程度的中介作用:孟德尔随机研究。
目的:研究肥胖相关人体测量特征与近视之间的因果关系,以及教育程度(EA)的中介作用:方法:采用单变量孟德尔随机法(UVMR)评估体重指数(BMI)、身高、腰臀比(WHR,根据体重指数调整)和平均球面等值(MSE)之间的因果关系。将体重指数分为脂肪和无脂肪质量,并纳入多变量孟德尔随机分析法(MVMR),以探讨不同的体重指数成分在体重指数与 MSE 之间因果关系中的作用。在两步孟德尔随机法(MR)的基础上进行了中介分析。具体来说,通过 UVMR 来估计 BMI 对 EA 的因果效应。EA对MSE的直接影响是通过MVMR估算的。EA 在 BMI-EA-MSE 模型中的中介效应是通过系数乘积法计算得出的。为了评估稳健性,还进行了表达量性状位点(eQTL)-MR、反向 MR 和连锁不平衡得分回归(LDSC):结果:遗传预测的较高体重指数对MSE有正向总效应(βIVW=0.26 D,95%CI=0.14至0.37 D,PβIVW=0.50 D,95%CI=0.21至0.78 D,P=0.001),但无脂肪质量与MSE之间没有显著关联。BMI对EA的因果效应为-0.14(95%CI=-0.16至-0.11,PPC结论:遗传预测的较高体重指数会降低近视度数,而 EA 的调解比例为 33%,脂肪量在体质量-近视中起着主要的保护作用。作为对以往观察性研究的补充,该研究为人体测量特征与屈光不正之间的关系提供了有力的证据,并为未来预防和控制近视的措施提供了理论依据。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
3141
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: · International Journal of Ophthalmology-IJO (English edition) is a global ophthalmological scientific publication and a peer-reviewed open access periodical (ISSN 2222-3959 print, ISSN 2227-4898 online). This journal is sponsored by Chinese Medical Association Xi’an Branch and obtains guidance and support from WHO and ICO (International Council of Ophthalmology). It has been indexed in SCIE, PubMed, PubMed-Central, Chemical Abstracts, Scopus, EMBASE , and DOAJ. IJO JCR IF in 2017 is 1.166. IJO was established in 2008, with editorial office in Xi’an, China. It is a monthly publication. General Scientific Advisors include Prof. Hugh Taylor (President of ICO); Prof.Bruce Spivey (Immediate Past President of ICO); Prof.Mark Tso (Ex-Vice President of ICO) and Prof.Daiming Fan (Academician and Vice President, Chinese Academy of Engineering. International Scientific Advisors include Prof. Serge Resnikoff (WHO Senior Speciatist for Prevention of blindness), Prof. Chi-Chao Chan (National Eye Institute, USA) and Prof. Richard L Abbott (Ex-President of AAO/PAAO) et al. Honorary Editors-in-Chief: Prof. Li-Xin Xie(Academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering/Honorary President of Chinese Ophthalmological Society); Prof. Dennis Lam (President of APAO) and Prof. Xiao-Xin Li (Ex-President of Chinese Ophthalmological Society). Chief Editor: Prof. Xiu-Wen Hu (President of IJO Press). Editors-in-Chief: Prof. Yan-Nian Hui (Ex-Director, Eye Institute of Chinese PLA) and Prof. George Chiou (Founding chief editor of Journal of Ocular Pharmacology & Therapeutics). Associate Editors-in-Chief include: Prof. Ning-Li Wang (President Elect of APAO); Prof. Ke Yao (President of Chinese Ophthalmological Society) ; Prof.William Smiddy (Bascom Palmer Eye instituteUSA) ; Prof.Joel Schuman (President of Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology,USA); Prof.Yizhi Liu (Vice President of Chinese Ophtlalmology Society); Prof.Yu-Sheng Wang (Director of Eye Institute of Chinese PLA); Prof.Ling-Yun Cheng (Director of Ocular Pharmacology, Shiley Eye Center, USA). IJO accepts contributions in English from all over the world. It includes mainly original articles and review articles, both basic and clinical papers. Instruction is Welcome Contribution is Welcome Citation is Welcome Cooperation organization International Council of Ophthalmology(ICO), PubMed, PMC, American Academy of Ophthalmology, Asia-Pacific, Thomson Reuters, The Charlesworth Group, Crossref,Scopus,Publons, DOAJ etc.
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