Higher thyrotropin leads to unfavorable lipid profile and somewhat higher cardiovascular disease risk: evidence from multi-cohort Mendelian randomization and metabolomic profiling.
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Authors
van Vliet, Nicolien A
Bos, Maxime M
Thesing, Carisha S
Chaker, Layal
Pietzner, Maik
Houtman, Evelyn
Neville, Matt J
Li-Gao, Ruifang
Trompet, Stella
Mustafa, Rima
Ahmadizar, Fariba
Beekman, Marian
Bot, Mariska
Budde, Kathrin
Christodoulides, Constantinos
Dehghan, Abbas
Delles, Christian
Elliott, Paul
Evangelou, Marina
Gao, He
Ghanbari, Mohsen
van Herwaarden, Antonius E
Ikram, M Arfan
Jaeger, Martin
Jukema, J Wouter
Karaman, Ibrahim
Karpe, Fredrik
Kloppenburg, Margreet
Meessen, Jennifer MTA
Meulenbelt, Ingrid
Milaneschi, Yuri
Mooijaart, Simon P
Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O
Netea, Mihai G
Netea-Maier, Romana T
Peeters, Robin P
Penninx, Brenda WJH
Sattar, Naveed
Slagboom, P Eline
Suchiman, H Eka D
Völzke, Henry
Willems van Dijk, Ko
van Heemst, Diana
BBMRI Metabolomics Consortium
Publication Date
2021-11-03Journal Title
BMC Med
ISSN
1741-7015
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
19
Issue
1
Number
ARTN 266
Pages
266
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
van Vliet, N. A., Bos, M. M., Thesing, C. S., Chaker, L., Pietzner, M., Houtman, E., Neville, M. J., et al. (2021). Higher thyrotropin leads to unfavorable lipid profile and somewhat higher cardiovascular disease risk: evidence from multi-cohort Mendelian randomization and metabolomic profiling.. BMC Med, 19 (1. ARTN 266), 266. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-021-02130-1
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Observational studies suggest interconnections between thyroid status, metabolism, and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), but causality remains to be proven. The present study aimed to investigate the potential causal relationship between thyroid status and cardiovascular disease and to characterize the metabolomic profile associated with thyroid status. METHODS: Multi-cohort two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) was performed utilizing genome-wide significant variants as instruments for standardized thyrotropin (TSH) and free thyroxine (fT4) within the reference range. Associations between TSH and fT4 and metabolic profile were investigated in a two-stage manner: associations between TSH and fT4 and the full panel of 161 metabolomic markers were first assessed hypothesis-free, then directional consistency was assessed through Mendelian randomization, another metabolic profile platform, and in individuals with biochemically defined thyroid dysfunction. RESULTS: Circulating TSH was associated with 52/161 metabolomic markers, and fT4 levels were associated with 21/161 metabolomic markers among 9432 euthyroid individuals (median age varied from 23.0 to 75.4 years, 54.5% women). Positive associations between circulating TSH levels and concentrations of very low-density lipoprotein subclasses and components, triglycerides, and triglyceride content of lipoproteins were directionally consistent across the multivariable regression, MR, metabolomic platforms, and for individuals with hypo- and hyperthyroidism. Associations with fT4 levels inversely reflected those observed with TSH. Among 91,810 CAD cases and 656,091 controls of European ancestry, per 1-SD increase of genetically determined TSH concentration risk of CAD increased slightly, but not significantly, with an OR of 1.03 (95% CI 0.99-1.07; p value 0.16), whereas higher genetically determined fT4 levels were not associated with CAD risk (OR 1.00 per SD increase of fT4; 95% CI 0.96-1.04; p value 0.59). CONCLUSIONS: Lower thyroid status leads to an unfavorable lipid profile and a somewhat increased cardiovascular disease risk.
Keywords
Coronary artery disease, Mendelian randomization, Metabolomics, Thyroid hormones, Adult, Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases, Female, Humans, Lipids, Male, Mendelian Randomization Analysis, Middle Aged, Thyrotropin, Thyroxine, Young Adult
Sponsorship
MRC (MC_UU_00006/1)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-021-02130-1
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332254
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