Zou Chenfeng, Wang Zhenqian, Huang Wenyu, Lu Jiawen, Guo Vivian Yawei, Zhang Yuying, Zang Shufei, Yang Jinying, Han Liyuan, Jiang Guozhi
School of Public Health (Shenzhen), Sun Yat-sen University, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China.
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China.
Front Nutr. 2022 Oct 10;9:920791. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2022.920791. eCollection 2022.
Observational studies have suggested a potential non-linear association between sleep duration and hyperuricemia. However, the causal nature and sex-specific differences are poorly understood. We aimed to determine the shape of sex-specific causal associations between sleep duration and hyperuricemia in the UK Biobank.
Logistic regression was used to investigate the observational association between self-reported sleep duration and hyperuricemia among 387,980 white British participants (mean age: 56.9 years and 46.0% males). Linear and non-linear Mendelian Randomization (MR) analyses were performed to assess the causal association between continuous sleep duration and hyperuricemia. The causal effects of genetically predicted short (<7 h) and long (>8 h) sleep durations on hyperuricemia were further estimated, respectively.
Traditional observational analysis suggested U- and J-shaped associations between sleep duration and hyperuricemia in females and males, respectively. Linear MR did not support the causal effect of sleep duration on hyperuricemia. Non-linear MR demonstrated an approximately U-shaped causal association between continuous sleep duration and hyperuricemia in overall participants and females, but not in males. Genetically predicted short sleep duration was significantly associated with hyperuricemia in females (OR [95% CI]: 1.21 [1.08-1.36]; = 0.001), but not in males (1.08 [0.98-1.18]; = 0.137). By contrast, genetically predicted long sleep duration was not significantly associated with the risk of hyperuricemia in either females or males.
Genetically predicted short sleep duration is a potential causal risk factor for hyperuricemia for females but has little effect on males. Long sleep duration does not appear to be causally associated with hyperuricemia.
观察性研究表明睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间可能存在非线性关联。然而,其因果性质和性别差异尚不清楚。我们旨在确定英国生物银行中睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间性别特异性因果关联的形式。
采用逻辑回归研究387980名英国白人参与者(平均年龄:56.9岁,男性占46.0%)自我报告的睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间的观察性关联。进行线性和非线性孟德尔随机化(MR)分析,以评估连续睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间的因果关联。分别进一步估计遗传预测的短睡眠时间(<7小时)和长睡眠时间(>8小时)对高尿酸血症的因果效应。
传统的观察性分析表明,女性和男性的睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间分别呈U形和J形关联。线性MR不支持睡眠时间对高尿酸血症的因果效应。非线性MR表明,总体参与者和女性的连续睡眠时间与高尿酸血症之间存在近似U形的因果关联,但男性不存在。遗传预测的短睡眠时间与女性高尿酸血症显著相关(OR[95%CI]:1.21[1.08 - 1.36];P = 0.001),但与男性无关(1.08[0.98 - 1.18];P = 0.137)。相比之下,遗传预测的长睡眠时间与女性或男性的高尿酸血症风险均无显著关联。
遗传预测的短睡眠时间是女性高尿酸血症的潜在因果危险因素,但对男性影响较小。长睡眠时间似乎与高尿酸血症无因果关联。