Ference Brian A
Division of Translational Research and Clinical Epidemiology, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, USA.
Curr Opin Lipidol. 2015 Dec;26(6):566-71. doi: 10.1097/MOL.0000000000000247.
Mendelian randomization studies have the potential to transform our understanding of cardiovascular medicine by generating naturally randomized data that can fill evidence gaps when a randomized trial would be either impossible or impractical to conduct. Here, we review recent Mendelian randomization studies evaluating the effect of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) on the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD).
Mendelian randomization studies consistently demonstrate that LDL-C is causally associated with the risk of CHD. Furthermore, exposure to genetically mediated lower LDL-C appears to be associated with a much greater than expected reduction in CHD risk, thus suggesting that LDL-C has a cumulative effect on the risk of CHD. In addition, genetically mediated lower LDL-C is log-linearly associated with the risk of CHD and the effect of polymorphisms in multiple different genes on the risk of CHD is remarkably consistent when measured per unit lower LDL-C.
The naturally randomized genetic evidence suggests that LDL-C has a causal and cumulative effect on the risk of CHD, and that the clinical benefit of exposure to lower LDL-C is determined by the absolute magnitude of exposure to lower LDL-C independent of the mechanism by which LDL-C is lowered.
孟德尔随机化研究有潜力改变我们对心血管医学的理解,通过生成自然随机的数据,当进行随机试验不可能或不切实际时,这些数据可填补证据空白。在此,我们综述近期评估低密度脂蛋白胆固醇(LDL-C)对冠心病(CHD)风险影响的孟德尔随机化研究。
孟德尔随机化研究一致表明,LDL-C与CHD风险存在因果关联。此外,遗传介导的LDL-C降低似乎与CHD风险的降低幅度远超预期相关,这表明LDL-C对CHD风险有累积效应。另外,遗传介导的LDL-C降低与CHD风险呈对数线性相关,并且当以每降低单位LDL-C来衡量时,多个不同基因中的多态性对CHD风险的影响非常一致。
自然随机的遗传证据表明,LDL-C对CHD风险有因果和累积效应,且接触较低LDL-C的临床益处取决于接触较低LDL-C的绝对程度,而与降低LDL-C的机制无关。