A bidirectional Mendelian randomization study supports causal effects of kidney function on blood pressure

Blood pressure and kidney function have a bidirectional relation. Hypertension has long been considered as a risk factor for kidney function decline. However, whether intensive blood pressure control could promote kidney health has been uncertain. The kidney is known to have a major role in affectin...

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Vydáno v:Kidney international Ročník 98; číslo 3; s. 708
Hlavní autoři: Yu, Zhi, Coresh, Josef, Qi, Guanghao, Grams, Morgan, Boerwinkle, Eric, Snieder, Harold, Teumer, Alexander, Pattaro, Cristian, Köttgen, Anna, Chatterjee, Nilanjan, Tin, Adrienne
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: United States 01.09.2020
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ISSN:1523-1755, 1523-1755
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Shrnutí:Blood pressure and kidney function have a bidirectional relation. Hypertension has long been considered as a risk factor for kidney function decline. However, whether intensive blood pressure control could promote kidney health has been uncertain. The kidney is known to have a major role in affecting blood pressure through sodium extraction and regulating electrolyte balance. This bidirectional relation makes causal inference between these two traits difficult. Therefore, to examine the causal relations between these two traits, we performed two-sample Mendelian randomization analyses using summary statistics of large-scale genome-wide association studies. We selected genetic instruments more likely to be specific for kidney function using meta-analyses of complementary kidney function biomarkers (glomerular filtration rate estimated from serum creatinine [eGFRcr], and blood urea nitrogen from the CKDGen Consortium). Systolic and diastolic blood pressure summary statistics were from the International Consortium for Blood Pressure and UK Biobank. Significant evidence supported the causal effects of higher kidney function on lower blood pressure. Based on the mode-based Mendelian randomization method, the effect estimates for one standard deviation (SD) higher in log-transformed eGFRcr was -0.17 SD unit (95 % confidence interval: -0.09 to -0.24) in systolic blood pressure and -0.15 SD unit (95% confidence interval: -0.07 to -0.22) in diastolic blood pressure. In contrast, the causal effects of blood pressure on kidney function were not statistically significant. Thus, our results support causal effects of higher kidney function on lower blood pressure and suggest preventing kidney function decline can reduce the public health burden of hypertension.
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ISSN:1523-1755
1523-1755
DOI:10.1016/j.kint.2020.04.044