Serum 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Concentrations and Ischemic Stroke and Its Subtypes.
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Authors
Larsson, Susanna C
Mishra, Aniket
Howson, Joanna MM
Michaëlsson, Karl
Markus, Hugh S
MEGASTROKE Project of the International Stroke Genetics Consortium
Publication Date
2018-10Journal Title
Stroke
ISSN
0039-2499
Publisher
American Heart Association
Volume
49
Issue
10
Pages
2508-2511
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Larsson, S. C., Traylor, M., Mishra, A., Howson, J. M., Michaëlsson, K., Markus, H. S., & MEGASTROKE Project of the International Stroke Genetics Consortium. (2018). Serum 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Concentrations and Ischemic Stroke and Its Subtypes.. Stroke, 49 (10), 2508-2511. https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.022242
Abstract
Background and Purpose- Observational studies have reported increased risk of ischemic stroke among individuals with low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (S-25OHD) concentrations but uncertainty remains about the causality of this association. We sought to determine whether S-25OHD concentrations are causally associated with ischemic stroke and its subtypes using Mendelian randomization. Methods- We used summary-level data for ischemic stroke (34 217 cases and 404 630 noncases) from the MEGASTROKE consortium. As instruments, we used 6 single nucleotide polymorphisms, explaining 7.5% of the variance in S-25OHD, previously identified to be associated with S-25OHD concentrations in the Study of Underlying Genetic Determinants of Vitamin D and Highly Related Traits consortium (n=79 366). The analyses were conducted using the inverse-variance-weighted method and complemented with the weighted median, heterogeneity-penalized, and Mendelian randomization-Egger approaches. Results- Genetically higher S-25OHD concentration was not associated with ischemic stroke. The odds ratios (95% CI) per genetically predicted 1-SD (≈18 nmol/L) increase in S-25OHD concentrations, based on all 6 single nucleotide polymorphisms, were 1.01 (0.94-1.08; P=0.84) for all ischemic stroke, 0.94 (0.80-1.11; P=0.49) for large artery stroke, 0.95 (0.82-1.11; P=0.55) for small vessel stroke, and 1.02 (0.90-1.16; P=0.74) for cardioembolic stroke. The results were similar in sensitivity analyses. Conclusions- These findings provide no support that higher S-25OHD concentrations are causally associated with any ischemic stroke subtype. Thus, vitamin D supplementation will unlikely reduce the risk of ischemic stroke in the general population.
Keywords
25-hydroxyvitamin D, polymorphisms, single nucleotide, random allocation, stroke, vitamin D
Sponsorship
This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare and the Swedish Brian Foundation. H.S. Markus is supported by a National Institute for Health Research Senior Investigator award, and his and Dr Traylor’s work is supported by infrastructural support from the Cambridge University Hospitals Trust National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre.
Funder references
British Heart Foundation (None)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.022242
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/286770
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