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    Self-reported walking pace, polygenic risk scores and risk of coronary artery disease in UK biobank

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    Author
    Zaccardi, Francesco
    Dempsey, Paddy C
    Davies, Melanie
    Khunti, Kamlesh
    Keyword
    Coronary artery disease
    Genetics
    Polygenic risk score
    UK biobank
    Walking pace
    Walking speed
    Date
    2022-09-01
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1016/j.numecd.2022.08.021
    Publisher's URL
    https://www.nmcd-journal.com/article/S0939-4753(22)00363-5/fulltext
    Abstract
    Background and aims: Both polygenic risk scores (PGS) and self-reported walking pace have been shown to predict cardiovascular disease; whether combining both factors produces greater risk differentiation is, however, unknown. Methods and results: We estimated the 10-year absolute risk of coronary artery disease (CAD), adjusted for traditional risk factors, and the C-index across nine PGS and self-reported walking pace in UK Biobank study participants between Mar/2006-Feb/2021. In 380,693 individuals (54.8% women), over a median (5th, 95th percentile) of 11.9 (8.3, 13.4) years, 2,603 (1.2%) CAD events occurred in women and 8,259 (4.8%) in men. Both walking pace and genetic risk were strongly associated with CAD. The absolute 10-year risk of CAD was highest in slow walkers at high genetic risk (top 20% of PGS): 2.72% (95% CI: 2.30-3.13) in women; 9.60% (8.62-10.57) in men. The risk difference between slow and brisk walkers was greater at higher [1.26% (0.81-1.71) in women; 3.63% (2.58-4.67) in men] than lower [0.76% (0.59-0.93) and 2.37% (1.96-2.78), respectively] genetic risk. Brisk walkers at high genetic risk had equivalent (women) or higher (men) risk than slow walkers at moderate-to-low genetic risk (bottom 80% of PGS). When added to a model containing traditional risk factors, both factors separately improved risk discrimination; combining them resulted in the greatest discrimination: C-index of 0.801 (0.793-0.808) in women; 0.732 (0.728-0.737) in men. Conclusion: Self-reported slow walkers at high genetic risk had the greatest risk of CAD, identifying a potentially important population for intervention. Both PGS and walking pace contributed to risk discrimination.
    Citation
    Zaccardi, F., Timmins, I. R., Goldney, J., Dudbridge, F., Dempsey, P. C., Davies, M. J., Khunti, K., & Yates, T. (2022). Self-reported walking pace, polygenic risk scores and risk of coronary artery disease in UK biobank. Nutrition, metabolism, and cardiovascular diseases : NMCD, 32(11), 2630–2637. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.numecd.2022.08.021
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/16843
    Collections
    Diabetology
    Cardiology

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