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Seasonal variation of vasopressin and its relevance for the winter peak of cardiometabolic disease: A pooled analysis of five cohorts

Authors :
Sofia Enhörning
Olle Melander
Gunnar Engström
Sölve Elmståhl
Lars Lind
Peter M. Nilsson
Mats Pihlsgård
Simon Timpka
Source :
Journal of Internal Medicine
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Vasopressin concentration is typically higher at night, during stress, and in males, but readily lowered by water intake. Vasopressin is also a causal candidate for cardiometabolic disease, which shows seasonal variation. Objective To study whether vasopressin concentration varies by season in a temperate climate. Methods The vasopressin surrogate marker copeptin was analyzed in fasting plasma samples from five population-based cohorts in Malmo, Sweden (n = 25,907, 50.4% women, age 18-86 years). We investigated seasonal variation of copeptin concentration and adjusted for confounders in sinusoidal models. Results The predicted median copeptin level was 5.81 pmol/L (7.18 pmol/L for men and 4.44 pmol/L for women). Copeptin exhibited a distinct seasonal pattern with a peak in winter (mid-February to mid-March) and nadir in late summer (mid-August to mid-September). The adjusted absolute seasonal variation in median copeptin was 0.62 pmol/L (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.50; 0.74, 0.98 pmol/L [95% CI 0.73; 1.23] for men and 0.46 pmol/L [95% CI 0.33; 0.59] for women). The adjusted relative seasonal variation in mean log copeptin z-score was 0.20 (95% CI 0.17; 0.24, 0.18 [95% CI 0.14; 0.23] in men and 0.24 [95% CI 0.19; 0.29] in women). The observed seasonal variation of copeptin corresponded to a risk increase of 4% for incident diabetes mellitus and 2% for incident coronary artery disease. Conclusion The seasonal variation of the vasopressin marker copeptin corresponds to increased disease risk and mirrors the known variation in cardiometabolic status across the year. Moderately increased water intake might mitigate the winter peak of cardiometabolic disease.

Details

ISSN :
09546820
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....378abb95cc257223b5594c2a1b99c12b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.13489