Phenome-wide association study of genetically predicted B vitamins and homocysteine biomarkers with multiple health and disease outcomes: analysis of the UK Biobank. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Although a number of health outcomes such as CVDs, metabolic-related outcomes, neurological disorders, pregnancy outcomes, and cancers have been identified in relation to B vitamins, evidence is of uneven quality and volume, and there is uncertainty about putative causal relationships. OBJECTIVES: To explore the effects of B vitamins and homocysteine on a wide range of health outcomes based on a large biorepository linking biological samples and electronic medical records. METHODS: First, we performed a phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) to investigate the associations of genetically predicted plasma concentrations (genetic component of the circulating concentrations) of folate, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, and their metabolite homocysteine with a wide range of disease outcomes (including both prevalent and incident events) among 385,917 individuals in the UK Biobank. Second, 2-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was used to replicate any observed associations and detect causality. We considered MR P <0.05 as significant for replication. Third, dose-response, mediation, and bioinformatics analyses were carried out to examine any nonlinear trends and to disentangle the underlying mediating biological mechanisms for the identified associations. RESULTS: In total, 1117 phenotypes were tested in each PheWAS analysis. After multiple corrections, 32 phenotypic associations of B vitamins and homocysteine were identified. Two-sample MR analysis supported that 3 of them were causal, including associations of higher plasma vitamin B6 with lower risk of calculus of kidney (OR: 0.64; 95%CI: 0.42, 0.97; P = 0.033), higher homocysteine concentration with higher risk of hypercholesterolemia (OR: 1.28, 95%CI: 1.04, 1.56; P = 0.018), and chronic kidney disease (OR: 1.32, 95%CI: 1.06, 1.63; P = 0.012). Significant nonlinear dose-response relationships were observed for the associations of folate with anemia, vitamin B12 with vitamin B-complex deficiencies, anemia and cholelithiasis, and homocysteine with cerebrovascular disease. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides strong evidence for the associations of B vitamins and homocysteine with endocrine/metabolic and genitourinary disorders.

published proceedings

  • Am J Clin Nutr

altmetric score

  • 6.05

author list (cited authors)

  • Wang, L., Li, X., Montazeri, A., MacFarlane, A. J., Momoli, F., Duthie, S., ... Theodoratou, E.

citation count

  • 3

complete list of authors

  • Wang, Lijuan||Li, Xue||Montazeri, Azita||MacFarlane, Amanda J||Momoli, Franco||Duthie, Susan||Senekal, Marjanne||Eguiagaray, Ines Mesa||Munger, Ron||Bennett, Derrick||Campbell, Harry||Rubini, Michele||McNulty, Helene||Little, Julian||Theodoratou, Evropi

publication date

  • March 2023