Scientific Reports (Jun 2024)

The combined effect of lifestyle factors and polygenic scores on age at onset in Parkinson’s disease

  • Carolin Gabbert,
  • Leonie Blöbaum,
  • Theresa Lüth,
  • Inke R. König,
  • Amke Caliebe,
  • Sebastian Sendel,
  • Björn-Hergen Laabs,
  • Christine Klein,
  • Joanne Trinh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65640-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The objective of this study was to investigate the association between a Parkinson’s disease (PD)-specific polygenic score (PGS) and protective lifestyle factors on age at onset (AAO) in PD. We included data from 4367 patients with idiopathic PD, 159 patients with GBA1-PD, and 3090 healthy controls of European ancestry from AMP-PD, PPMI, and Fox Insight cohorts. The association between PGS and lifestyle factors on AAO was assessed with linear and Cox proportional hazards models. The PGS showed a negative association with AAO (β = − 1.07, p = 6 × 10–7) in patients with idiopathic PD. The use of one, two, or three of the protective lifestyle factors showed a reduction in the hazard ratio by 21% (p = 0.0001), 44% (p 0.05). In our cohort, coffee, tobacco, aspirin, and PGS are independent predictors of PD AAO. Additionally, lifestyle factors seem to have a greater influence on AAO than common genetic risk variants with aspirin presenting the largest effect.

Keywords