Medical Research Council Integrative Epidemiology Unit, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2023 May 4;18(5):e0285258. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0285258. eCollection 2023.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Childhood maltreatment is associated with CVD and may modify genetic susceptibility to cardiovascular risk factors. We used genetic and phenotypic data from 100,833 White British UK Biobank participants (57% female; mean age = 55.9 years). We regressed nine cardiovascular risk factors/diseases (alcohol consumption, body mass index [BMI], low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, lifetime smoking behaviour, systolic blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and stroke) on their respective polygenic scores (PGS) and self-reported exposure to childhood maltreatment. Effect modification was tested on the additive and multiplicative scales by including a product term (PGSmaltreatment) in regression models. On the additive scale, childhood maltreatment accentuated the effect of genetic susceptibility to higher BMI (Peffect modification: 0.003). Individuals not exposed to childhood maltreatment had an increase in BMI of 0.12 SD (95% CI: 0.11, 0.13) per SD increase in BMI PGS, compared to 0.17 SD (95% CI: 0.14, 0.19) in those exposed to all types of childhood maltreatment. On the multiplicative scale, similar results were obtained for BMI though these did not withstand to Bonferroni correction. There was little evidence of effect modification by childhood maltreatment in relation to other outcomes, or of sex-specific effect modification. Our study suggests the effects of genetic susceptibility to a higher BMI may be moderately accentuated in individuals exposed to childhood maltreatment. However, geneenvironment interactions are likely not a major contributor to the excess CVD burden experienced by childhood maltreatment victims.
心血管疾病(CVD)受遗传和环境因素的影响。儿童期虐待与 CVD 有关,并可能改变心血管危险因素的遗传易感性。我们使用了来自 100833 名白种英国 UK Biobank 参与者(57%为女性;平均年龄=55.9 岁)的遗传和表型数据。我们将 9 种心血管危险因素/疾病(饮酒、体重指数[BMI]、低密度脂蛋白胆固醇、终生吸烟行为、收缩压、心房颤动、冠心病、2 型糖尿病和中风)回归到各自的多基因评分(PGS)和自我报告的儿童期虐待暴露情况。通过在回归模型中包含乘积项(PGS*虐待),在加性和乘法尺度上测试了效应修饰。在加性尺度上,儿童虐待加重了遗传易感性对更高 BMI 的影响(Peffect modification:0.003)。未暴露于儿童期虐待的个体,其 BMI 每增加 1 个 SD,BMI PGS 增加 0.12 SD(95%CI:0.11,0.13),而所有类型的儿童期虐待暴露个体则增加 0.17 SD(95%CI:0.14,0.19)。在乘法尺度上,尽管这些结果未通过 Bonferroni 校正,但对于 BMI 仍得到了类似的结果。在其他结果或性别特异性效应修饰方面,儿童虐待对效应修饰的证据很少。我们的研究表明,在暴露于儿童虐待的个体中,遗传易感性对更高 BMI 的影响可能会适度加重。然而,基因-环境相互作用不太可能是儿童期虐待受害者 CVD 负担增加的主要原因。