The association of alcohol consumption with glaucoma and related traits: findings from the UK BiobankShow others and affiliations
2023 (English)In: Ophthalmology Glaucoma, ISSN 2589-4234, Vol. 6, no 4, p. 366-379Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
PURPOSE: To examine the associations of alcohol consumption with glaucoma and related traits; to assess whether a genetic predisposition to glaucoma modified these associations; and to perform Mendelian randomization (MR) experiments to probe causal effects.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional observational and gene-environment interaction analyses in the UK Biobank. Two-sample MR experiments using summary statistics from large genetic consortia.
PARTICIPANTS: UK Biobank participants with data on intraocular pressure (IOP) (n=109 097), OCT derived macular inner retinal layer thickness measures (n=46 236) and glaucoma status (n=173 407).
METHODS: Participants were categorized according to self-reported drinking behaviors. Quantitative estimates of alcohol intake were derived from touchscreen questionnaires and food composition tables. We performed a two-step analysis, first comparing categories of alcohol consumption (never, infrequent, regular, and former drinkers), before assessing for a dose-response effect in regular drinkers only. Multivariable linear, logistic and restricted cubic spline (RCS) regression, adjusted for key sociodemographic, medical, anthropometric and lifestyle factors, were used to examine associations. We assessed whether any association was modified by a multi-trait glaucoma polygenic risk score. The inverse-variance weighted method was used for the main MR analyses.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: IOP, macular retinal nerve fiber layer (mRNFL) thickness, macular ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer (mGCIPL) thickness, and prevalent glaucoma. RESULTS: Compared to infrequent drinkers, regular drinkers had higher IOP (+0.17mmHg; P<0.001) and thinner mGCIPL (-0.17μm; P=0.049); while former drinkers had a higher prevalence of glaucoma (OR 1.53; P=0.002). In regular drinkers, alcohol intake was adversely associated with all outcomes in a dose-dependent manner (all P<0.001). RCS regression analyses suggested non-linear associations, with apparent threshold effects at approximately 50g (∼6 UK or 4 US alcoholic units)/week, for mRNFL and mGCIPL thickness. Significantly stronger alcohol-IOP associations were observed in participants at higher genetic susceptibility to glaucoma (Pinteraction<0.001). MR analyses provided evidence for a causal association with mGCIPL thickness.
CONCLUSIONS: Alcohol intake was consistently and adversely associated with glaucoma and related traits, and at levels below current UK (<112g/week) and US (women: <98g/week; men: <196g/week) guidelines. While we cannot infer causality definitively, these results will be of interest to people with, or at risk of, glaucoma and their advising physicians.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2023. Vol. 6, no 4, p. 366-379
Keywords [en]
Alcohol, UK Biobank, glaucoma, intraocular pressure, optical coherence tomography
National Category
Ophthalmology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-102644DOI: 10.1016/j.ogla.2022.11.008ISI: 001048654000001PubMedID: 36481453Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85146634254OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-102644DiVA, id: diva2:1718156
Funder
Wellcome trust, 220558/Z/20/Z
Note
Funding agencies:
UCL Overseas Research Scholarship, Fight for Sight (London) 1956A
The Desmond Foundation
Moorfields EyeCharity Springboard Award
General Sir John Monash Scholarship
The Glaucoma Foundation
Research to Prevent Blindness
National Institutes of Health EY015473 EY032559 EY032559 EY027129 EY014104 EY022305 EY020928 EY031820)
Aerpio
ARVO Foundation
David Epstein Award
Alcon
Fight for Sight (London) 1956A
UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship MR/T040912/1
Moorfields Eye Charity Career Development Fellowship
Lister Institute of Preventative Medicine Fellowship
Foundation Trust and University College London
Institute of Ophthalmology for a Biomedical Research Centre
2022-12-122022-12-122024-04-08Bibliographically approved