TY - JOUR
T1 - Alcohol consumption and subclinical and clinical coronary heart disease
T2 - a Mendelian randomization analysis
AU - SESSA and ACCESS Research Groups
AU - Hisamatsu, Takashi
AU - Miura, Katsuyuki
AU - Tabara, Yasuharu
AU - Sawayama, Yuichi
AU - Kadowaki, Takashi
AU - Kadota, Aya
AU - Torii, Sayuki
AU - Kondo, Keiko
AU - Yano, Yuichiro
AU - Fujiyoshi, Akira
AU - Yamamoto, Takashi
AU - Nakagawa, Yoshihisa
AU - Horie, Minoru
AU - Kimura, Takeshi
AU - Okamura, Tomonori
AU - Ueshima, Hirotsugu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.
PY - 2022/11/8
Y1 - 2022/11/8
N2 - AIMS: The potential effect of alcohol consumption on coronary heart disease (CHD) remains unclear. We used the variant rs671 in the aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 gene (ALDH2) as an instrument to investigate the causal role of alcohol intake in subclinical and clinical CHD. METHODS: We conducted two Mendelian randomization studies: a cross-sectional study of coronary artery calcification (CAC) on computed tomography of 1029 healthy men (mean age, 63.8 years) and a case-control study of 421 men with CHD [acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or stable angina pectoris] who underwent coronary revascularization and 842 age-matched male controls. RESULTS: In the CAC study, medians (25%tiles, 75%tiles) of alcohol consumption by ALDH2-rs671 *2 homozygotes [n = 86 (8.4%)], *1*2 heterozygotes [n = 397 (38.5%)], and *1 homozygotes [n = 546 (53.1%)] were 0.0 (0.0, 0.0), 28.0 (0.0, 129.0), and 224.0 (84.0, 350.0) g/week, respectively. In age-adjusted Poisson regression with robust error variance, compared with *2 homozygotes, relative risks for prevalent CAC score >0, ≥100, and ≥300 in *1 homozygotes were 1.29 (95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.57), 1.76 (1.05-2.96), and 1.81 (0.80-4.09), respectively. In age-adjusted ordinal logistic regression for CAC distributions, we observed higher odds among *1 homozygotes [odds ratio, 2.19 (1.39-3.46)] and even among *1*2 heterozygotes [1.77 (1.11-2.82)] compared with *2 homozygotes. In the case-control study, conditional logistic regression revealed lower prevalence of *1 homozygotes among men with CHD [odds ratio, 0.54 (0.35-0.82)], especially ACS [0.46 (0.27-0.77)], than controls. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate a positive association of alcohol consumption with CAC burden but an inverse association with clinical CHD, especially ACS.
AB - AIMS: The potential effect of alcohol consumption on coronary heart disease (CHD) remains unclear. We used the variant rs671 in the aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 gene (ALDH2) as an instrument to investigate the causal role of alcohol intake in subclinical and clinical CHD. METHODS: We conducted two Mendelian randomization studies: a cross-sectional study of coronary artery calcification (CAC) on computed tomography of 1029 healthy men (mean age, 63.8 years) and a case-control study of 421 men with CHD [acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or stable angina pectoris] who underwent coronary revascularization and 842 age-matched male controls. RESULTS: In the CAC study, medians (25%tiles, 75%tiles) of alcohol consumption by ALDH2-rs671 *2 homozygotes [n = 86 (8.4%)], *1*2 heterozygotes [n = 397 (38.5%)], and *1 homozygotes [n = 546 (53.1%)] were 0.0 (0.0, 0.0), 28.0 (0.0, 129.0), and 224.0 (84.0, 350.0) g/week, respectively. In age-adjusted Poisson regression with robust error variance, compared with *2 homozygotes, relative risks for prevalent CAC score >0, ≥100, and ≥300 in *1 homozygotes were 1.29 (95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.57), 1.76 (1.05-2.96), and 1.81 (0.80-4.09), respectively. In age-adjusted ordinal logistic regression for CAC distributions, we observed higher odds among *1 homozygotes [odds ratio, 2.19 (1.39-3.46)] and even among *1*2 heterozygotes [1.77 (1.11-2.82)] compared with *2 homozygotes. In the case-control study, conditional logistic regression revealed lower prevalence of *1 homozygotes among men with CHD [odds ratio, 0.54 (0.35-0.82)], especially ACS [0.46 (0.27-0.77)], than controls. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate a positive association of alcohol consumption with CAC burden but an inverse association with clinical CHD, especially ACS.
KW - Alcohol
KW - Aldehyde dehydrogenase 2
KW - Coronary artery calcification
KW - Coronary heart disease
KW - Mendelian randomization
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U2 - 10.1093/eurjpc/zwac156
DO - 10.1093/eurjpc/zwac156
M3 - Article
C2 - 35907253
AN - SCOPUS:85141894806
SN - 2047-4873
VL - 29
SP - 2006
EP - 2014
JO - European Journal of Preventive Cardiology
JF - European Journal of Preventive Cardiology
IS - 15
ER -