Alcohol Consumption and Cardiovascular Disease: A Mendelian Randomization Study.

Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine. 2020;13(3):e002814

Plain language summary

Heavy alcohol consumption is an important cause of death and disability, but the association between moderate drinking and cardiovascular disease (CVD) is complex. The aim of this study is to investigate the potential causal relationship between alcohol consumption and 8 CVDs. A secondary aim was to explore the associations of genetically predicted alcohol consumption with possible mediators and confounders of the alcohol-CVD associations. This study is a mendelian randomization study [an epidemiological technique that utilizes genetic variants that are reliably associated with a potentially modifiable risk factor to determine its causal role for disease risk]. Results indicate that higher alcohol consumption may be associated with increased risk of stroke and peripheral artery disease. Furthermore, alcohol consumption was also associated with higher blood pressure and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and with lower triglyceride levels.

Abstract

BACKGROUND The causal role of alcohol consumption for cardiovascular disease remains unclear. We used Mendelian randomization (MR) to predict the effect of alcohol consumption on 8 cardiovascular diseases. METHODS Up to 94 single-nucleotide polymorphisms were used as instrumental variables for alcohol consumption. Genetic association estimates for cardiovascular diseases were obtained from large-scale consortia and UK Biobank. Analyses were conducted using the inverse variance-weighted, weighted median, MR-PRESSO, MR-Egger, and multivariable MR methods. RESULTS Genetically predicted alcohol consumption was consistently associated with stroke and peripheral artery disease across the different analyses. The odds ratios (ORs) per 1-SD increase of log-transformed alcoholic drinks per week were 1.27 ([95% CI, 1.12-1.45] P=2.87×10-4) for stroke and 3.05 ([95% CI, 1.92-4.85] P=2.30×10-6) for peripheral artery disease in the inverse variance-weighted analysis. There was some evidence for positive associations of genetically predicted alcohol consumption with coronary artery disease (OR, 1.16 [95% CI, 1.00-1.36]; P=0.052), atrial fibrillation (OR, 1.17 [95% CI, 1.00-1.37]; P=0.050), and abdominal aortic aneurysm (OR, 2.60 [95% CI, 1.15-5.89]; P=0.022) in the inverse variance-weighted analysis. These associations were somewhat attenuated in multivariable MR analysis adjusted for smoking initiation. There was no evidence of associations of genetically predicted alcohol consumption with heart failure (OR, 1.00 [95% CI, 0.68-1.47]; P=0.996), venous thromboembolism (OR, 1.04 [95% CI, 0.77-1.39]; P=0.810), and aortic valve stenosis (OR, 1.03 [95% CI, 0.56-1.90]; P=0.926). CONCLUSIONS This study provides evidence of a causal relationship between higher alcohol consumption and increased risk of stroke and peripheral artery disease. The causal role of alcohol consumption for other cardiovascular diseases requires further research.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Immune and inflammation
Patient Centred Factors : Mediators/Alcohol consumption
Environmental Inputs : Diet
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Nutrition
Functional Laboratory Testing : Blood

Methodological quality

Jadad score : Not applicable
Allocation concealment : Not applicable

Metadata