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在60岁以上人群中,增加食物加盐频率会增加骨矿物质密度低的风险——一项孟德尔随机化研究。

Higher frequency of adding salt to foods increases the risk of low bone mineral density in individuals over 60 - A Mendelian randomization study.

作者信息

Li Ying, Wang Yuhan, Guo Lianying, Yu Ye, Jiang Mengqi, Deng Lili, Zhou Qingyi, Sun Lu, Feng Xu, Zhang Zhuo

机构信息

School of Public Health. Shenyang Medical College.

Radiation Health Center. Liaoning Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

出版信息

Nutr Hosp. 2025 Jun 19;43(3):456-463. doi: 10.20960/nh.05492.

Abstract

Background: Adding salt to foods is associated with an increased osteoporosis risk, but the causality of this relationship remains unknown. Methods: in this study, we conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study to investigate the potential causal effect of adding salt to foods on bone mineral density (BMD). Utilizing data from the UK Biobank to estimate adding salt to foods based on self-reported consumption and genetic association data for BMD from the Genetic Factors for Osteoporosis (GEFOS) consortium, we examined various BMD sites: forearm (distal 1/3 radius), lumbar spine (L1-4), femoral neck, total body BMD (TB-BMD), and age-specific TB-BMD (0-15, 15-30, 30-45, 45-60, and over 60 years). The primary analysis used the inverse variance weighted method, supplemented by sensitivity analyses employing multiple MR methods, MR-PRESSO, and leave-one-out approach. Pleiotropy and heterogeneity were assessed using MR-Egger intercept, funnel plots, Cochran's Q, and Rucker's Q. Results: we found a suggestive association between higher frequency of adding salt to foods and decreased TB-BMD in Europeans over 60 (OR = 0.84, 95 % CI = 0.721-0.979, p = 0.026). This association remained robust across different methods and sensitivity analyses, showing no apparent heterogeneity or pleiotropy. However, no causal effect was detected on BMD in other age groups or skeletal sites. Conclusion: this MR study suggests a higher frequency of adding salt to foods significantly increases low BMD risk in individuals over 60, underscoring the importance of reducing salt consumption in this demographic for osteoporosis prevention.

摘要

背景

在食物中加盐与骨质疏松风险增加有关,但这种关系的因果性尚不清楚。方法:在本研究中,我们进行了一项两样本孟德尔随机化(MR)研究,以调查在食物中加盐对骨密度(BMD)的潜在因果效应。利用英国生物银行的数据,根据自我报告的摄入量估计在食物中加盐的情况,并结合来自骨质疏松症遗传因素(GEFOS)联盟的BMD基因关联数据,我们检查了多个BMD部位:前臂(桡骨远端1/3)、腰椎(L1-4)、股骨颈、全身骨密度(TB-BMD)以及特定年龄的TB-BMD(0-15岁、15-30岁、30-45岁、45-60岁和60岁以上)。主要分析采用逆方差加权法,并辅以使用多种MR方法、MR-PRESSO和留一法的敏感性分析。使用MR-Egger截距、漏斗图、 Cochr an's Q和Rucker's Q评估多效性和异质性。结果:我们发现,在60岁以上的欧洲人中,在食物中加盐的频率较高与TB-BMD降低之间存在提示性关联(OR = 0.84,95%CI = 0.721-0.979,p = 0.026)。这种关联在不同方法和敏感性分析中均保持稳健,未显示出明显的异质性或多效性。然而,在其他年龄组或骨骼部位未检测到对BMD的因果效应。结论:这项MR研究表明,在食物中加盐的频率较高会显著增加60岁以上个体患低骨密度的风险,强调了在这一人群中减少盐摄入量对预防骨质疏松症的重要性。

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