Understanding the consequences of education inequality on cardiovascular disease: mendelian randomisation study

Alice R Carter(University of Bristol), Dipender Gill(Imperial College London), Neil M Davies(University of Bristol), Amy E. Taylor(University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust), Taavi Tillmann(University College London), Julien Vaucher(University of Lausanne), Robyn E. Wootton(University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust), Marcus R. Munafò(University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust), Gibran Hemani(University of Bristol), Rainer Malik(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Sudha Seshadri(The University of Texas at San Antonio Health Science Center), Daniel Woo(University of Cincinnati Medical Center), Stephen Burgess(University of Cambridge), George Davey Smith(University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust), Michael V. Holmes(National Institute for Health and Care Research), Ioanna Tzoulaki(University of Ioannina), Laura D Howe(University of Bristol), Abbas Dehghan(Imperial College London)
BMJ
May 22, 2019
Cited by 338Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the role of body mass index (BMI), systolic blood pressure, and smoking behaviour in explaining the effect of education on the risk of cardiovascular disease outcomes. DESIGN: Mendelian randomisation study. SETTING: UK Biobank and international genome-wide association study data. PARTICIPANTS: Predominantly participants of European ancestry. EXPOSURE: Educational attainment, BMI, systolic blood pressure, and smoking behaviour in observational analysis, and randomly allocated genetic variants to instrument these traits in mendelian randomisation. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURE: The risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, myocardial infarction, and cardiovascular disease (all subtypes; all measured in odds ratio), and the degree to which this is mediated through BMI, systolic blood pressure, and smoking behaviour respectively. RESULTS: Each additional standard deviation of education (3.6 years) was associated with a 13% lower risk of coronary heart disease (odds ratio 0.86, 95% confidence interval 0.84 to 0.89) in observational analysis and a 37% lower risk (0.63, 0.60 to 0.67) in mendelian randomisation analysis. As a proportion of the total risk reduction, BMI was estimated to mediate 15% (95% confidence interval 13% to 17%) and 18% (14% to 23%) in the observational and mendelian randomisation estimates, respectively. Corresponding estimates were 11% (9% to 13%) and 21% (15% to 27%) for systolic blood pressure and 19% (15% to 22%) and 34% (17% to 50%) for smoking behaviour. All three risk factors combined were estimated to mediate 42% (36% to 48%) and 36% (5% to 68%) of the effect of education on coronary heart disease in observational and mendelian randomisation analyses, respectively. Similar results were obtained when investigating the risk of stroke, myocardial infarction, and cardiovascular disease. CONCLUSIONS: BMI, systolic blood pressure, and smoking behaviour mediate a substantial proportion of the protective effect of education on the risk of cardiovascular outcomes and intervening on these would lead to reductions in cases of cardiovascular disease attributable to lower levels of education. However, more than half of the protective effect of education remains unexplained and requires further investigation.


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