Vitamin D levels and risk of delirium: A mendelian randomization study in the UK Biobank

36Citations
Citations of this article
59Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo estimate effects of Vitamin D levels on incident delirium hospital admissions using inherited genetic variants in mendelian randomization models, which minimize confounding and exclude reverse causation.MethodsLongitudinal analysis using the UK Biobank, community-based, volunteer cohort (2006-2010) with incident hospital-diagnosed delirium (ICD-10 F05) ascertained during ≤9.9 years of follow-up of hospitalization records (to early 2016). We included volunteers of European descent aged 60-plus years by end of follow-up. We used single-nucleotide polymorphisms previously shown to increase circulating Vitamin D levels, and APOE variants. Cox competing models accounting for mortality were used.ResultsOf 313,121 participants included, 544 were hospitalized with delirium during follow-up. Vitamin D variants were protective for incident delirium: hazard ratio = 0.74 per 10 nmol/L (95% confidence interval 0.62-0.87, p = 0.0004) increase in genetically instrumented Vitamin D, with no evidence for pleiotropy (mendelian randomization-Egger p > 0.05). Participants with ≥1 APOE ϵ4 allele were more likely to develop delirium (e.g., ϵ4ϵ4 hazard ratio = 3.73, 95% confidence interval 2.68-5.21, p = 8.0 × 10-15 compared to ϵ3ϵ3), but there was no interaction with Vitamin D variants.Conclusions and relevanceIn a large community-based cohort, there is genetic evidence supporting a causal role for Vitamin D levels in incident delirium. Trials of correction of low Vitamin D levels in the prevention of delirium are needed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Bowman, K., Jones, L., Pilling, L. C., Delgado, J., Kuchel, G. A., Ferrucci, L., … Melzer, D. (2019). Vitamin D levels and risk of delirium: A mendelian randomization study in the UK Biobank. Neurology, 92(12), E1387–E1394. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000007136

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free