PLoS Medicine (Feb 2012)

Homocysteine and coronary heart disease: meta-analysis of MTHFR case-control studies, avoiding publication bias.

  • Robert Clarke,
  • Derrick A Bennett,
  • Sarah Parish,
  • Petra Verhoef,
  • Mariska Dötsch-Klerk,
  • Mark Lathrop,
  • Peng Xu,
  • Børge G Nordestgaard,
  • Hilma Holm,
  • Jemma C Hopewell,
  • Danish Saleheen,
  • Toshihiro Tanaka,
  • Sonia S Anand,
  • John C Chambers,
  • Marcus E Kleber,
  • Willem H Ouwehand,
  • Yoshiji Yamada,
  • Clara Elbers,
  • Bas Peters,
  • Alexandre F R Stewart,
  • Muredach M Reilly,
  • Barbara Thorand,
  • Salim Yusuf,
  • James C Engert,
  • Themistocles L Assimes,
  • Jaspal Kooner,
  • John Danesh,
  • Hugh Watkins,
  • Nilesh J Samani,
  • Rory Collins,
  • Richard Peto,
  • MTHFR Studies Collaborative Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001177
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e1001177

Abstract

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BackgroundModerately elevated blood levels of homocysteine are weakly correlated with coronary heart disease (CHD) risk, but causality remains uncertain. When folate levels are low, the TT genotype of the common C677T polymorphism (rs1801133) of the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase gene (MTHFR) appreciably increases homocysteine levels, so "Mendelian randomization" studies using this variant as an instrumental variable could help test causality.Methods and findingsNineteen unpublished datasets were obtained (total 48,175 CHD cases and 67,961 controls) in which multiple genetic variants had been measured, including MTHFR C677T. These datasets did not include measurements of blood homocysteine, but homocysteine levels would be expected to be about 20% higher with TT than with CC genotype in the populations studied. In meta-analyses of these unpublished datasets, the case-control CHD odds ratio (OR) and 95% CI comparing TT versus CC homozygotes was 1.02 (0.98-1.07; p = 0.28) overall, and 1.01 (0.95-1.07) in unsupplemented low-folate populations. By contrast, in a slightly updated meta-analysis of the 86 published studies (28,617 CHD cases and 41,857 controls), the OR was 1.15 (1.09-1.21), significantly discrepant (p = 0.001) with the OR in the unpublished datasets. Within the meta-analysis of published studies, the OR was 1.12 (1.04-1.21) in the 14 larger studies (those with variance of log ORConclusionsThe CI for the overall result from large unpublished datasets shows lifelong moderate homocysteine elevation has little or no effect on CHD. The discrepant overall result from previously published studies reflects publication bias or methodological problems.