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Mendelian randomization evaluation of causal effects of fibrinogen on incident coronary heart disease.

Authors :
Cavin K Ward-Caviness
Paul S de Vries
Kerri L Wiggins
Jennifer E Huffman
Lisa R Yanek
Lawrence F Bielak
Franco Giulianini
Xiuqing Guo
Marcus E Kleber
Tim Kacprowski
Stefan Groß
Astrid Petersman
George Davey Smith
Fernando P Hartwig
Jack Bowden
Gibran Hemani
Martina Müller-Nuraysid
Konstantin Strauch
Wolfgang Koenig
Melanie Waldenberger
Thomas Meitinger
Nathan Pankratz
Eric Boerwinkle
Weihong Tang
Yi-Ping Fu
Andrew D Johnson
Ci Song
Moniek P M de Maat
André G Uitterlinden
Oscar H Franco
Jennifer A Brody
Barbara McKnight
Yii-Der Ida Chen
Bruce M Psaty
Rasika A Mathias
Diane M Becker
Patricia A Peyser
Jennifer A Smith
Suzette J Bielinski
Paul M Ridker
Kent D Taylor
Jie Yao
Russell Tracy
Graciela Delgado
Stella Trompet
Naveed Sattar
J Wouter Jukema
Lewis C Becker
Sharon L R Kardia
Jerome I Rotter
Winfried März
Marcus Dörr
Daniel I Chasman
Abbas Dehghan
Christopher J O'Donnell
Nicholas L Smith
Annette Peters
Alanna C Morrison
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 5, p e0216222 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundFibrinogen is an essential hemostatic factor and cardiovascular disease risk factor. Early attempts at evaluating the causal effect of fibrinogen on coronary heart disease (CHD) and myocardial infraction (MI) using Mendelian randomization (MR) used single variant approaches, and did not take advantage of recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) or multi-variant, pleiotropy robust MR methodologies.Methods and findingsWe evaluated evidence for a causal effect of fibrinogen on both CHD and MI using MR. We used both an allele score approach and pleiotropy robust MR models. The allele score was composed of 38 fibrinogen-associated variants from recent GWAS. Initial analyses using the allele score used a meta-analysis of 11 European-ancestry prospective cohorts, free of CHD and MI at baseline, to examine incidence CHD and MI. We also applied 2 sample MR methods with data from a prevalent CHD and MI GWAS. Results are given in terms of the hazard ratio (HR) or odds ratio (OR), depending on the study design, and associated 95% confidence interval (CI). In single variant analyses no causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD or MI was observed. In multi-variant analyses using incidence CHD cases and the allele score approach, the estimated causal effect (HR) of a 1 g/L higher fibrinogen concentration was 1.62 (CI = 1.12, 2.36) when using incident cases and the allele score approach. In 2 sample MR analyses that accounted for pleiotropy, the causal estimate (OR) was reduced to 1.18 (CI = 0.98, 1.42) and 1.09 (CI = 0.89, 1.33) in the 2 most precise (smallest CI) models, out of 4 models evaluated. In the 2 sample MR analyses for MI, there was only very weak evidence of a causal effect in only 1 out of 4 models.ConclusionsA small causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD is observed using multi-variant MR approaches which account for pleiotropy, but not single variant MR approaches. Taken together, results indicate that even with large sample sizes and multi-variant approaches MR analyses still cannot exclude the null when estimating the causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD, but that any potential causal effect is likely to be much smaller than observed in epidemiological studies.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
14
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.138107b510a249878e58480e248bba04
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216222