Mendelian randomization shows causal effects of birth weight and childhood body mass index on the risk of frailty

Junhao Cui, Shuqin Fu, Lin Zhu, Peng Li, Chunlan Song
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Abstract

The association between birth weight and childhood body mass index (BMI) and frailty has been extensively studied, but it is currently unclear whether this relationship is causal.We utilized a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) methodology to investigate the causal effects of birth weight and childhood BMI on the risk of frailty. Instrumental variables (p < 5E-08) strongly associated with own birth weight (N = 298,142 infants), offspring birth weight (N = 210,267 mothers), and childhood BMI (N = 39,620) were identified from large-scale genomic data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). The frailty status was assessed using the frailty index, which was derived from comprehensive geriatric assessments of older adults within the UK Biobank and the TwinGene database (N = 175,226).Genetically predicted one standard deviation (SD) increase in own birth weight, but not offspring birth weight (maternal-specific), was linked to a decreased frailty index (β per SD increase = −0.068, 95%CI = −0.106 to −0.030, p = 3.92E-04). Conversely, genetically predicted one SD increase in childhood BMI was associated with an elevated frailty index (β per SD increase = 0.080, 95%CI = 0.046 to 0.114, p = 3.43E-06) with good statistical power (99.8%). The findings remained consistent across sensitivity analyses and showed no horizontal pleiotropy (p > 0.05).This MR study provides evidence supporting a causal relationship between lower birth weight, higher childhood BMI, and an increased risk of frailty.
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孟德尔随机法显示出生体重和儿童期体重指数对体弱风险的因果效应
出生体重和儿童期体重指数(BMI)与虚弱之间的关系已被广泛研究,但目前尚不清楚这种关系是否是因果关系。我们利用双样本孟德尔随机化(MR)方法研究了出生体重和儿童期体重指数对虚弱风险的因果影响。这项MR研究提供的证据支持了较低的出生体重、较高的儿童体重指数与虚弱风险增加之间的因果关系。
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