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Association of Smoking, Alcohol Consumption, Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, and Glycemic Risk Factors With Age-Related Macular Degeneration: A Mendelian Randomization Study.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Kuan, Valerie 
Warwick, Alasdair 
Hingorani, Aroon 
Tufail, Adnan 
Cipriani, Valentina 

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Advanced age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of blindness in Western countries. Causal, modifiable risk factors need to be identified to develop preventive measures for advanced AMD. OBJECTIVE: To assess whether smoking, alcohol consumption, blood pressure, body mass index, and glycemic traits are associated with increased risk of advanced AMD. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS: This study used 2-sample mendelian randomization. Genetic instruments composed of variants associated with risk factors at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10-8) were obtained from published genome-wide association studies. Summary-level statistics for these instruments were obtained for advanced AMD from the International AMD Genomics Consortium 2016 data set, which consisted of 16 144 individuals with AMD and 17 832 control individuals. Data were analyzed from July 2020 to September 2021. EXPOSURES: Smoking initiation, smoking cessation, lifetime smoking, age at smoking initiation, alcoholic drinks per week, body mass index, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, glycated hemoglobin, fasting glucose, and fasting insulin. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Advanced AMD and its subtypes, geographic atrophy (GA), and neovascular AMD. RESULTS: A 1-SD increase in logodds of genetically predicted smoking initiation was associated with higher risk of advanced AMD (odds ratio [OR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.13-1.40; P < .001), while a 1-SD increase in logodds of genetically predicted smoking cessation (former vs current smoking) was associated with lower risk of advanced AMD (OR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.50-0.87; P = .003). Genetically predicted increased lifetime smoking was associated with increased risk of advanced AMD (OR per 1-SD increase in lifetime smoking behavior, 1.32; 95% CI, 1.09-1.59; P = .004). Genetically predicted alcohol consumption was associated with higher risk of GA (OR per 1-SD increase of log-transformed alcoholic drinks per week, 2.70; 95% CI, 1.48-4.94; P = .001). There was insufficient evidence to suggest that genetically predicted blood pressure, body mass index, and glycemic traits were associated with advanced AMD. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This study provides genetic evidence that increased alcohol intake may be a causal risk factor for GA. As there are currently no known treatments for GA, this finding has important public health implications. These results also support previous observational studies associating smoking behavior with risk of advanced AMD, thus reinforcing existing public health messages regarding the risk of blindness associated with smoking.

Description

Keywords

Alcohol Drinking, Angiogenesis Inhibitors, Blindness, Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Mendelian Randomization Analysis, Risk Factors, Smoking, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A, Visual Acuity, Wet Macular Degeneration

Journal Title

JAMA Ophthalmol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2168-6165
2168-6173

Volume Title

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00002/7)
Wellcome Trust (204623/Z/16/Z)
British Heart Foundation (None)
British Heart Foundation (CH/12/2/29428)
British Heart Foundation (RG/18/13/33946)