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Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption with Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: A Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study.
J Nutr Health Aging. 2022; 26(2):190-196.JN

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

In observational studies, caffeine has been associated with a lower risk of obesity. However, whether the associations are causal and apply to coffee, which is a mixture of chemical compounds is unclear.

DESIGN

Two sample Mendelian randomization study.

SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS

Genetic instruments predicting caffeine were extracted from an existing GWAS of serum metabolites in 1960 individuals of European descent. For coffee consumption up to 91,462 individuals of European ancestry with top SNPs followed-up in ~30,062 coffee consumers and up to 375,833 individuals of European ancestry were taken from two separate studies. Genetic associations with obesity classes (n= 263,407), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) (n=210,086), waist circumference (WC) (n= 231,355), and hip circumference (HC) (n=211,117) were obtained from summary statistics of individuals of European ancestry from the Genetic Investigation of Anthropocentric Traits (GIANT).

METHODS

The inverse-variance weighted method (IVW) was used as the main analysis. We also employed the weighted median approach (WM) and MR-Egger regression as sensitivity analyses. To gauge evidence of directional pleiotropy, we used Cochrane's Q test, and MR-PRESSO global test, as measures of heterogeneity between ratio estimates of variants.

RESULTS

There was little evidence to support an association between blood caffeine and any anthropometric measure of obesity in the primary and sensitivity analyses. However, genetically predicted coffee consumption was positively associated with higher class I obesity and WHR. Furthermore, this association was maintained after correction for multiple testing (P < 0.05/6 = 0.008). Results from the GWAS of coffee consumption were in tandem with results from the GWMA, but associations with class I obesity and waist to hip ratio (WHR) were not maintained after correction for multiple testing.

CONCLUSION

We found little evidence that caffeine or coffee consumption protects against obesity, adding to growing literature suggesting that previous observational studies may have been confounded. This study demonstrates the dangers of ignoring genetic testing for targeted interventions and basing dietary policy recommendations solely on observational studies restricted to specific populations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Mr. Vikram Narayan, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, 4072, Australia, E-mail: v.narayan@uqconnect.edu.au.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

35166314

Citation

Narayan, V P., and S Y. Yoon. "Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption With Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: a Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study." The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging, vol. 26, no. 2, 2022, pp. 190-196.
Narayan VP, Yoon SY. Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption with Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: A Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study. J Nutr Health Aging. 2022;26(2):190-196.
Narayan, V. P., & Yoon, S. Y. (2022). Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption with Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: A Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study. The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging, 26(2), 190-196. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12603-022-1736-5
Narayan VP, Yoon SY. Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption With Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: a Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study. J Nutr Health Aging. 2022;26(2):190-196. PubMed PMID: 35166314.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Associations of Blood Caffeine and Genetically Predicted Coffee Consumption with Anthropometric Measures of Obesity: A Two Sample Mendelian Randomization Study. AU - Narayan,V P, AU - Yoon,S Y, PY - 2022/2/15/entrez PY - 2022/2/16/pubmed PY - 2022/3/18/medline KW - Caffeine KW - body mass index KW - coffee KW - mendelian randomization KW - obesity SP - 190 EP - 196 JF - The journal of nutrition, health & aging JO - J Nutr Health Aging VL - 26 IS - 2 N2 - OBJECTIVES: In observational studies, caffeine has been associated with a lower risk of obesity. However, whether the associations are causal and apply to coffee, which is a mixture of chemical compounds is unclear. DESIGN: Two sample Mendelian randomization study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Genetic instruments predicting caffeine were extracted from an existing GWAS of serum metabolites in 1960 individuals of European descent. For coffee consumption up to 91,462 individuals of European ancestry with top SNPs followed-up in ~30,062 coffee consumers and up to 375,833 individuals of European ancestry were taken from two separate studies. Genetic associations with obesity classes (n= 263,407), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) (n=210,086), waist circumference (WC) (n= 231,355), and hip circumference (HC) (n=211,117) were obtained from summary statistics of individuals of European ancestry from the Genetic Investigation of Anthropocentric Traits (GIANT). METHODS: The inverse-variance weighted method (IVW) was used as the main analysis. We also employed the weighted median approach (WM) and MR-Egger regression as sensitivity analyses. To gauge evidence of directional pleiotropy, we used Cochrane's Q test, and MR-PRESSO global test, as measures of heterogeneity between ratio estimates of variants. RESULTS: There was little evidence to support an association between blood caffeine and any anthropometric measure of obesity in the primary and sensitivity analyses. However, genetically predicted coffee consumption was positively associated with higher class I obesity and WHR. Furthermore, this association was maintained after correction for multiple testing (P < 0.05/6 = 0.008). Results from the GWAS of coffee consumption were in tandem with results from the GWMA, but associations with class I obesity and waist to hip ratio (WHR) were not maintained after correction for multiple testing. CONCLUSION: We found little evidence that caffeine or coffee consumption protects against obesity, adding to growing literature suggesting that previous observational studies may have been confounded. This study demonstrates the dangers of ignoring genetic testing for targeted interventions and basing dietary policy recommendations solely on observational studies restricted to specific populations. SN - 1760-4788 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/35166314/Associations_of_Blood_Caffeine_and_Genetically_Predicted_Coffee_Consumption_with_Anthropometric_Measures_of_Obesity:_A_Two_Sample_Mendelian_Randomization_Study_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -