A blood metabolic signature of a healthy lifestyle and colorectal cancer risk: results from cohort and Mendelian randomization studies.

Fangcheng Yuan, Yu Shuai, Wanqing Wen, Guochong Jia, Rikje Ruiter, Shuai Xu, Yaohua Yang, Jirong Long, Mohsen Ghanbari, Xiao-Ou Shu, Danxia Yu, Wei Zheng
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Abstract

Background: Despite a healthy lifestyle being linked to reduced colorectal cancer (CRC) risk, prior studies using surveys to measure lifestyle factors failed to consider potential inter-individual heterogeneity in metabolic responses. We aimed to characterize a metabolic signature as a measure of metabolic responses to a healthy lifestyle and evaluate its association with CRC risk.

Methods: Among 211,135 UK Biobank participants, we derived a healthy lifestyle score (HLS) from eight lifestyle components and applied elastic net regression to derive its metabolic signature from 249 biomarkers in plasma samples collected at baseline. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the association of the signature with CRC risk. To infer potential causality of the signature, we conducted a genome-wide association study among 184,765 UK Biobank participants of European ancestry, followed by a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis in 78,473 CRC cases and 107,143 controls of European ancestry.

Results: The metabolic signature, which explained 32.6% of the total variance in HLS, was associated with 12% lower CRC risk (HR=0.88; 95% CI=0.84-0.92 per standard deviation [SD] increase; Ptrend<0.001). MR results provided strong evidence for a potential causal association of the signature with CRC (odds ratio [OR]=0.90; 95% CI=0.84-0.95 per SD increase; P-value<0.001).

Conclusions: A metabolic signature characterizing a healthy lifestyle was inversely associated with CRC risk. Certain biomarkers constituting the signature may be involved in the lifestyle pathway for CRC incidence.

Impact: Our study further supported lifestyle modifications and identified potential targets for CRC prevention.

健康生活方式和结直肠癌风险的血液代谢特征:来自队列和孟德尔随机化研究的结果
背景:尽管健康的生活方式与降低结直肠癌(CRC)风险有关,但先前的研究使用调查来衡量生活方式因素,未能考虑代谢反应中潜在的个体间异质性。我们的目的是表征代谢特征,作为对健康生活方式的代谢反应的测量,并评估其与CRC风险的关系。方法:在英国生物银行(UK Biobank)的211,135名参与者中,我们从8个生活方式成分中得出了健康生活方式评分(HLS),并应用弹性网回归从基线时收集的血浆样本中的249个生物标志物中得出了其代谢特征。使用Cox比例风险模型来估计签名与结直肠癌风险之间的风险比(hr)和95%置信区间(CIs)。为了推断该特征的潜在因果关系,我们在184,765名欧洲血统的英国生物银行参与者中进行了一项全基因组关联研究,随后对78,473例CRC病例和107,143例欧洲血统的对照进行了双样本孟德尔随机化(MR)分析。结果:代谢特征解释了HLS总方差的32.6%,与结直肠癌风险降低12%相关(HR=0.88;95% CI=0.84-0.92 /标准差[SD]增加;结论:表征健康生活方式的代谢特征与结直肠癌风险呈负相关。某些生物标志物可能参与了结直肠癌发病率的生活方式途径。影响:我们的研究进一步支持生活方式的改变,并确定了预防结直肠癌的潜在目标。
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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