Causal linkage of tobacco smoking with ageing: Mendelian randomization analysis towards telomere attrition and sarcopenia

Author:

Park Sehoon12,Kim Seong Geun2,Lee Soojin34,Kim Yaerim5,Cho Semin6,Kim Kwangsoo7,Kim Yong Chul2,Han Seung Seok28,Lee Hajeong24,Lee Jung Pyo489,Joo Kwon Wook248,Lim Chun Soo489,Kim Yon Su1248,Kim Dong Ki248ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

2. Department of Internal Medicine Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

3. Department of Internal Medicine Uijeongbu Eulji University Medical Center Seoul South Korea

4. Department of Internal Medicine Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

5. Department of Internal Medicine Keimyung University School of Medicine Daegu South Korea

6. Department of Internal Medicine Chung‐Ang University Gwangmyeong Hospital Gyeonggi‐do South Korea

7. Transdisciplinary Department of Medicine & Advanced Technology Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

8. Kidney Research Institute Seoul National University Seoul South Korea

9. Department of Internal Medicine Seoul National University Boramae Medical Center Seoul South Korea

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAgeing traits and frailty are important health issues in modern medicine. Evidence supporting the causal effects of tobacco smoking on various ageing traits is required.MethodsThis study performed Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis instrumenting 377 genetic variants associated with being an ever‐smoker at a genome‐wide significance level to test the causal estimates from tobacco smoking. The outcome data were obtained from 337 138 white British ancestry participants from the UK Biobank. Leucocyte telomere length, appendicular lean mass index, subjective walking pace, handgrip strength, and wristband accelerometry‐determined physical activity degree were collected as ageing‐related outcomes. Summary‐level MR analysis was performed using the inverse variance‐weighted method and pleiotropy‐robust MR methods, including weighted median and MR‐Egger. Observational association between the outcome traits and phenotypically being an ever‐smoker was also investigated.ResultsSummary‐level MR analysis indicated that a higher genetic predisposition for tobacco smoking was significantly associated with shorter leucocyte telomere length (twofold increase in prevalence of smoking towards standardized Z‐score, −0.041 [−0.054, −0.028]), lower appendicular lean mass index (−0.007 [−0.010, −0.005]), slower walking pace (ordinal category, −0.047 [−0.054, −0.033]) and lower time spent on moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity (hours per week, −0.39 [−0.56, −0.23]). The causal estimates were non‐significant towards handgrip strength phenotype (kg, 0.074 [−0.055, 0.204]). Pleiotropy‐robust MR results generally supported the main causal estimates. The observational findings also showed significant association between being an ever‐smoker and the ageing traits.ConclusionsGenetically predicted and observational tobacco smoking status are significantly associated with poor ageing phenotypes. Healthcare providers may continue to reduce tobacco use, which may be helpful in reducing the burden of ageing and frailty.

Funder

Seoul National University Hospital

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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