Nutrients (Jul 2023)

Causal Effect of Chondroitin, Glucosamine, Vitamin, and Mineral Intake on Kidney Function: A Mendelian Randomization Study

  • Jeong-Min Cho,
  • Jung-Hun Koh,
  • Seong-Geun Kim,
  • Soojin Lee,
  • Yaerim Kim,
  • Semin Cho,
  • Kwangsoo Kim,
  • Yong-Chul Kim,
  • Seung-Seok Han,
  • Hajeong Lee,
  • Jung-Pyo Lee,
  • Kwon-Wook Joo,
  • Chun-Soo Lim,
  • Yon-Su Kim,
  • Dong-Ki Kim,
  • Sehoon Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15153318
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 15
p. 3318

Abstract

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The causal effects of chondroitin, glucosamine, and vitamin/mineral supplement intake on kidney function remain unknown, despite being commonly used. We conducted a two-sample summary-level Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to test for causal associations between regular dietary supplement intake and kidney function. Genetic instruments for chondroitin, glucosamine, and vitamin/mineral supplement intake were obtained from a genome-wide association study of European ancestry. Summary statistics for the log-transformed estimated glomerular filtration rate (log-eGFR) were provided by the CKDGen consortium. The multiplicative random-effects inverse-variance weighted method showed that genetically predicted chondroitin and glucosamine intake was causally associated with a lower eGFR (chondroitin, eGFR change beta = −0.113%, standard error (SE) = 0.03%, p-value = 2 × 10−4; glucosamine, eGFR change beta = −0.240%, SE = 0.035%, p-value = 6 × 10−12). However, a genetically predicted vitamin/mineral supplement intake was associated with a higher eGFR (eGFR change beta = 1.426%, SE = 0.136%, p-value = 1 × 10−25). Validation analyses and pleiotropy-robust MR results for chondroitin and vitamin/mineral supplement intake supported the main results. Our MR study suggests a potential causal effect of chondroitin and glucosamine intake on kidney function. Therefore, clinicians should carefully monitor their long-term effects.

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