Mediating factors in the association between educational attainment and stroke: A mendelian randomization study

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Ssm-Population Health Pub Date : 2025-02-15 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmph.2025.101766
Nuo Xu , Yiwen Qiu , Diliyaer Ainiwan , Boya Wang , Xialidan Alifu , Haibo Zhou , Haoyue Cheng , Ye Huang , Libi Zhang , Hui Liu , Lina Yu , Yunxian Yu
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Abstract

Background

Stroke is a common cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease with high disability and mortality. Lower educational attainment has been reported to be associated with an increased risk of stroke, but it is unclear which pathways mediate this association.

Methods

Using genome-wide association studies (GWAS) based on European ancestry, we performed two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses to investigate the causal association of genetically estimated educational attainment with stroke and its subtypes. Then, we used mediation analyses to assess the extent to which seven cardiometabolic risk factors alone and in combination explain their effects.

Results

Genetically estimated educational attainment was negatively associated with the risk of any stroke (AS), any ischemic stroke (AIS), ischemic stroke subtypes (large artery stroke [LAS], cardioembolic stroke [CES], and small vessel stroke [SVS]), and hemorrhagic stroke subtypes (cerebral hemorrhage [ICH] and subarachnoid hemorrhage [SAH]). For individual mediating effects, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and smoking mediated the impact of education on AS, AIS, and ischemic stroke subtypes, while obesity, NAFLD, and alcohol consumption played no role. For combined mediation, the proportion of the association that cardiometabolic mediators explained ranged from 4% (95% CI: 2.72%–5.27%) for SVS to 38.73% (95% CI: 37.42%–40.05%) for LAS. Nevertheless, they did not account for any of the estimates for hemorrhagic stroke subtypes.

Conclusion

Higher educational attainment would have a protective effect on stroke and its subtypes, and cardiometabolic risk factors mediated part proportion of this association. Hence, patients with low education should pay more attention to managing cardiometabolic diseases to prevent stroke.
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教育程度与中风之间关系的中介因素:亡羊补牢式随机研究
脑卒中是一种常见的心脑血管疾病,致残率和死亡率高。据报道,受教育程度较低与中风风险增加有关,但尚不清楚是哪种途径介导了这种联系。方法采用基于欧洲血统的全基因组关联研究(GWAS),我们进行了两样本孟德尔随机化(MR)分析,以调查遗传估计的受教育程度与中风及其亚型之间的因果关系。然后,我们使用中介分析来评估七个心脏代谢危险因素单独和联合解释其影响的程度。结果遗传估计受教育程度与任何脑卒中(AS)、任何缺血性脑卒中(AIS)、缺血性脑卒中亚型(大动脉脑卒中[LAS]、心栓塞性脑卒中[CES]、小血管脑卒中[SVS])和出血性脑卒中亚型(脑出血[ICH]和蛛网膜下腔出血[SAH])的风险呈负相关。对于个体的中介作用,2型糖尿病、高血压、高脂血症和吸烟介导了教育对AS、AIS和缺血性卒中亚型的影响,而肥胖、NAFLD和饮酒没有作用。对于联合介导,心脏代谢介质解释的关联比例从SVS的4% (95% CI: 2.72%-5.27%)到LAS的38.73% (95% CI: 37.42%-40.05%)不等。然而,他们没有考虑出血性中风亚型的任何估计。结论高等教育程度对脑卒中及其亚型有保护作用,心脏代谢危险因素在其中起部分作用。因此,受教育程度低的患者应更加重视心脏代谢疾病的管理,以预防脑卒中。
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来源期刊
Ssm-Population Health
Ssm-Population Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
298
审稿时长
101 days
期刊介绍: SSM - Population Health. The new online only, open access, peer reviewed journal in all areas relating Social Science research to population health. SSM - Population Health shares the same Editors-in Chief and general approach to manuscripts as its sister journal, Social Science & Medicine. The journal takes a broad approach to the field especially welcoming interdisciplinary papers from across the Social Sciences and allied areas. SSM - Population Health offers an alternative outlet for work which might not be considered, or is classed as ''out of scope'' elsewhere, and prioritizes fast peer review and publication to the benefit of authors and readers. The journal welcomes all types of paper from traditional primary research articles, replication studies, short communications, methodological studies, instrument validation, opinion pieces, literature reviews, etc. SSM - Population Health also offers the opportunity to publish special issues or sections to reflect current interest and research in topical or developing areas. The journal fully supports authors wanting to present their research in an innovative fashion though the use of multimedia formats.
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