Abstract
AbstractBackgroundWhile low body mass index (BMI) is associated with emphysema and obesity is associated with airway disease in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the underlying mechanisms are unclear.MethodsWe aggregated genetic variants from population-based genome-wide association studies to generate a polygenic score of BMI (PGSBMI). We calculated this score for participants from COPD-enriched and community-based cohorts and examined associations with automated quantification and visual interpretation of computed tomographic emphysema and airway wall thickness (AWT). We summarized the results using meta-analysis.ResultsIn the random-effects meta-analyses combining results of all cohorts (n=16,349), a standard deviation increase of the PGSBMIwas associated with less emphysema as quantified by log-transformed percent of low attenuation areas ≤ 950 Hounsfield units (β= -0.062,p<0.0001) and 15thpercentile value of lung density histogram (β=2.27,p<0.0001), and increased AWT as quantified by the square root of wall area of a 10-mm lumen perimeter airway (β=0.016,p=0.0006) and mean segmental bronchial wall area percent (β=0.26,p=0.0013). For imaging characteristics assessed by visual interpretation, a higher PGSBMIwas associated with reduced emphysema in both COPD-enriched cohorts (OR for a higher severity grade=0.89,p=0.0080) and in the community-based Framingham Heart Study (OR for the presence of emphysema=0.82,p=0.0034), and a higher risk of airway wall thickening in the COPDGene study (OR=1.17,p=0.0023).ConclusionsIn individuals with and without COPD, a higher body mass index polygenic risk is associated with both quantitative and visual decreased emphysema and increased AWT, suggesting genetic determinants of BMI affect both emphysema and airway wall thickening.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory