Authors |
Bing Yu,1Taryn Alkis,1 Yanlin Ma,2 Jee-Young Moon,3 Traci Bartz,4 Jian Rong,5 Yan Gao,6 Jeanette Simino,6 Martin G. Larson,5 Jennifer Brody,4 Myriam Fornage,1 Robert C. Kaplan,3 Ani Manichaikul,2 Stephanie J. London,7 Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Program
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Abstract Text |
Introduction: Spirometric measures of pulmonary function form the basis for diagnosis and monitoring of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and predict morbidity and mortality. The molecular underpinnings of pulmonary function have not been fully characterized. Metabolomics holds promise to identify metabolic signatures involved in regulation of pulmonary function and develop biomarkers of early COPD.
Methods: Metabolomic profiling of blood samples was performed in seven TOPMed cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS), the Framingham Heart Study (FHS), the Jackson Heart Study (JHS) study, the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) and the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL). We examined the cross-sectional associations by ethnic-study strata between each metabolite and three spirometic measures: forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC) and their ratio (FEV1/FVC), adjusting for age, age squared, sex, height, height squared, weight, smoking and kidney function. Fixed-effect inverse variance weighted meta-analysis was applied to produce trans-ethnic estimates.
Results: We meta-analyzed 13,622 participants with 808 metabolites (missing rate ≤ 25% in at least two studies), including 4,260 African Americans, 5,494 European Americans with 3,868 Hispanic Americans. There were 69, 75 and 3 metabolites significantly associated with FEV1, FVC and FEV1/FVC respectively (p<6.2×10-5, 0.05/808). Fifty-five metabolites were significantly associated with both FEV1 and FVC, where an SD increment of metabolite levels were associated with an average 29.5 ml and 36.8 ml change of FEV1 and FVC. Galactose and transcription/translation metabolism was enriched based on the Small Molecule Pathway Database. Among those 55 metabolites, we observed generally consistent effects across ethnic groups and across sex groups. We conducted sensitivity analyses by excluding COPD cases or smokers, which produced comparable results. We examined whether these 55 FEV1 and FVC related metabolites were also associated with COPD status (defined by FEV1/FVC and FEV1 being below the lower limit of normal, n = 742 cases). Eight metabolites met strict look-up level significance (p<9.0×10-4, 0.05/55) with an SD increment of metabolite levels associated with an average odds ratio for COPD of 1.21. (Figure).
Conclusion: We identified multiple metabolites that related to pulmonary function and COPD in multi-ethnic populations. These findings could provide novel insight into regulation of pulmonary function and COPD pathogenesis.
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