Frontiers in Nutrition (Jun 2022)

Circulating Vitamin D Concentrations and Risk of Atrial Fibrillation: A Mendelian Randomization Study Using Non-deficient Range Summary Statistics

  • Nan Zhang,
  • Yueying Wang,
  • Ziliang Chen,
  • Daiqi Liu,
  • Gary Tse,
  • Gary Tse,
  • Gary Tse,
  • Panagiotis Korantzopoulos,
  • Konstantinos P. Letsas,
  • Christos A. Goudis,
  • Gregory Y. H. Lip,
  • Gregory Y. H. Lip,
  • Guangping Li,
  • Zhiwei Zhang,
  • Tong Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.842392
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Background and AimsVitamin D deficiency is a common disorder and has been linked with atrial fibrillation (AF) in several observational studies, although the causal relationships remain unclear. We conducted a Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to determine the causal association between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations and AF.Methods and ResultsThe analyses were performed using summary statistics obtained for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) identified from large genome-wide association meta-analyses conducted on serum 25(OH)D (N = 79,366) and AF (N = 1,030,836). Six SNPs related to serum 25(OH)D were used as instrumental variables. The association between 25(OH)D and AF was estimated using both the fixed-effect and random-effects inverse variance weighted (IVW) method. The MR analyses found no evidence to support a causal association between circulating 25(OH)D level and risk of AF using random-effects IVW (odds ratio per unit increase in log 25(OH)D = 1.003, 95% CI, 0.841–1.196; P = 0.976) or fixed-effect IVW method (OR = 1.003, 95% CI, 0.876–1.148; P = 0.968). Sensitivity analyses yielded similar results. No heterogeneity and directional pleiotropy were detected.ConclusionUsing summary statistics, this MR study suggests that genetically predicted circulating vitamin D concentrations, especially for a non-deficient range, were not causally associated with AF in the general population. Future studies using non-linear design and focusing on the vitamin D deficiency population are needed to further evaluate the causal effect of vitamin D concentrations on AF.

Keywords