Protein Nutritional Status and Frailty: A Mendelian Randomization Study

Author:

Tomata Yasutake12,Wang Yunzhang1,Hägg Sara1ORCID,Jylhävä Juulia13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden

2. School of Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Health and Social Services, Kanagawa University of Human Services, Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan

3. Faculty of Social Sciences (Health Sciences) and Gerontology Research Center (GEREC), University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Observational studies have suggested that better protein nutritional status may contribute to prevention of frailty. Objective We sought to examine this hypothesis using a Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis. Methods We conducted a two-sample MR study using GWAS summary statistics data of the UK Biobank. We applied genetically predicted serum albumin as a primary exposure measure and serum total protein as a secondary exposure measure. The outcome measure was the Rockwood frailty index (FI) based on 49 deficits from 356,432 individuals (53.3% of them were women, with a mean ± SD age of 56.7 ± 8.0 y. The association between serum protein measures and FI was mainly analyzed by use of the inverse variance weighted method. Results A genetically predicted serum albumin concentration was not statistically significantly associated with FI in the full sample. However, in women, we observed a preventive association between genetically predicted serum albumin and FI (β = −0.172 per g/L; 95% CI: −0.336, −0.007; P = 0.041). In the full sample, genetically predicted serum total protein was inversely associated with FI (β: −0.153 per g/L; 95% CI: −0.251, −0.056; P = 0.002). In both women and men, higher serum total protein was significantly inversely associated with FI; regression coefficients were −0.148 per g/L (95% CI: −0.287, −0.009; P = 0.037) for women, −0.154 per g/L (95% CI: −0.290, −0.018; P = 0.027) for men. Conclusions The present MR study implies that better protein nutritional status modestly contributes to reducing the risk of frailty.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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