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  3. Age at Natural Menopause and Blood Pressure Traits: Mendelian Randomization Study.
 

Age at Natural Menopause and Blood Pressure Traits: Mendelian Randomization Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/160279
Date of Publication
September 22, 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Sozial- ...

Author
Roa Díaz, Zayne Milenaorcid-logo
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Asllanaj, Eralda
Amin, Hasnat A
Rojas, Lyda Z
Nano, Jana
Ikram, Mohammad Arfan
Drenos, Fotios
Franco Duran, Oscar Horacio
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Pazoki, Raha
Marques-Vidal, Pedro
Voortman, Trudy
Muka, Taulant
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

300 - Social sciences...

Series
Journal of clinical medicine
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2077-0383
Publisher
MDPI
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3390/jcm10194299
PubMed ID
34640315
Uncontrolled Keywords

age at menopause bloo...

Description
Observational studies suggest that early onset of menopause is associated with increased risk of hypertension. Whether this association is causal or due to residual confounding and/or reverse causation remains undetermined. We aimed to evaluate the observational and causal association between age at natural menopause (ANM) and blood pressure traits in Caucasian women. A cross-sectional and one-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study was conducted in 4451 postmenopausal women from the CoLaus and Rotterdam studies. Regression models were built with observational data to study the associations of ANM with systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP/DBP) and hypertension. One-sample MR analysis was performed by calculating a genetic risk score of 54 ANM-related variants, previously identified in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on ANM. In the two-sample MR analysis we used the estimates from the ANM-GWAS and association estimates from 168,575 women of the UK Biobank to evaluate ANM-related variants and their causal association with SBP and DBP. Pooled analysis from both cohorts showed that a one-year delay in menopause onset was associated with 2% (95% CI 0; 4) increased odds of having hypertension, and that early menopause was associated with lower DBP (β = -1.31, 95% CI -2.43; -0.18). While one-sample MR did not show a causal association between ANM and blood pressure traits, the two-sample MR showed a positive causal association of ANM with SBP; the last was driven by genes related to DNA damage repair. The present study does not support the hypothesis that early onset of menopause is associated with higher blood pressure. Our results suggest different ANM-related genetic pathways could differently impact blood pressure.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/53798
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Roa-Diaz_JClinMed_2021.pdftextAdobe PDF1.75 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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