UCSF School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
Stanford Department of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 8;15(10):e0240185. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240185. eCollection 2020.
Mendelian Randomization (MR) studies exploiting single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) predictive of leukocyte telomere length (LTL) have suggested that shorter genetically determined telomere length (gTL) is associated with increased risks of degenerative diseases, including cardiovascular and Alzheimer's diseases, while longer gTL is associated with increased cancer risks. These varying directions of disease risk have long begged the question: when it comes to telomeres, is it better to be long or short? We propose to operationalize and answer this question by considering the relative impact of long gTL vs. short gTL on disease incidence and burden in a population.
We used odds ratios (OR) of disease associated with gTL from a recently published MR meta-analysis to approximate the relative contributions of gTL to the incidence and burden of neoplastic and non-neoplastic disease in a European population. We obtained incidence data of the 9 cancers associated with long gTL and 4 non-neoplastic diseases associated with short gTL from the Institute of Health Metrics (IHME). Incidence rates of individual cancers from SEER, a database of United States cancer records, were used to weight the ORs in order to align with the available IHME data. These data were used to estimate the excess incidences due to long vs. short gTL, expressed as per 100,000 persons per standard deviation (SD) change in gTL. To estimate the population disease burden, we used the Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALY) metric from the IHME, a measure of overall disease burden that accounts for both mortality and morbidity, and similarly calculated the excess DALY associated with long vs. short gTL.
Our analysis shows that, despite the markedly larger ORs of neoplastic disease, the large incidence of degenerative diseases causes the excess incidence attributable to gTL to balance that of neoplastic diseases. Long gTL is associated with an excess incidence of 94.04 cases/100,000 persons/SD (45.49-168.84, 95%CI) from the 9 cancer, while short gTL is associated with an excess incidence of 121.49 cases/100,000 persons/SD (48.40-228.58, 95%CI) from the 4 non-neoplastic diseases. When considering disease burden using the DALY metric, long gTL is associated with an excess 1255.25 DALYs/100,000 persons/SD (662.71-2163.83, 95%CI) due to the 9 cancers, while short gTL is associated with an excess 1007.75 DALYs/100,000 persons/SD (411.63-1847.34, 95%CI) due to 4 non-neoplastic diseases.
Our results show that genetically determined long and short telomere length are associated with disease risk and burden of approximately equal magnitude. These results provide quantitative estimates of the relative impact of genetically-predicted short vs. long TL in a human population, and provide evidence in support of the cancer-aging paradox, wherein human telomere length is balanced by opposing evolutionary forces acting to minimize both neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases. Importantly, our results indicate that odds ratios alone can be misleading in different clinical scenarios, and disease risk should be assessed from both an individual and population level in order to draw appropriate conclusions about the risk factor's role in human health.
利用单核苷酸多态性(SNP)预测白细胞端粒长度(LTL)的孟德尔随机化(MR)研究表明,较短的遗传决定端粒长度(gTL)与退行性疾病(包括心血管疾病和阿尔茨海默病)的风险增加有关,而较长的 gTL 与癌症风险增加有关。这些不同的疾病风险方向长期以来一直存在一个问题:说到端粒,是长好还是短好?我们建议通过考虑长 gTL 与短 gTL 对人群中疾病发病率和负担的相对影响来操作和回答这个问题。
我们使用最近发表的 MR 荟萃分析中与 gTL 相关的疾病的比值比(OR)来近似 gTL 对欧洲人群中肿瘤和非肿瘤疾病发病率和负担的相对贡献。我们从健康指标研究所(IHME)获得了与长 gTL 相关的 9 种癌症和与短 gTL 相关的 4 种非肿瘤疾病的发病率数据。使用美国癌症记录数据库 SEER 中的个体癌症发病率数据对 OR 进行加权,以与可用的 IHME 数据保持一致。使用这些数据来估计由于 gTL 较长或较短而导致的超额发病率,以每 10 万人每 gTL 标准偏差(SD)变化表示。为了估计人群疾病负担,我们使用 IHME 的残疾调整生命年(DALY)指标,这是一种衡量整体疾病负担的指标,考虑了死亡率和发病率,并类似地计算了由于 gTL 较长或较短而导致的超额 DALY。
我们的分析表明,尽管肿瘤疾病的 OR 明显更大,但退行性疾病的高发病率导致与 gTL 相关的发病率增加与肿瘤疾病的发病率增加相平衡。长 gTL 与 9 种癌症的 94.04 例/10 万人/SD(45.49-168.84,95%CI)的超额发病率有关,而短 gTL 与 4 种非肿瘤疾病的 121.49 例/10 万人/SD(48.40-228.58,95%CI)的超额发病率有关。当使用 DALY 指标考虑疾病负担时,长 gTL 与 9 种癌症相关的 1255.25 DALY/10 万人/SD(662.71-2163.83,95%CI)的超额发病率有关,而短 gTL 与 4 种非肿瘤疾病相关的 1007.75 DALY/10 万人/SD(411.63-1847.34,95%CI)的超额发病率有关。
我们的结果表明,遗传决定的长和短端粒长度与疾病风险和负担的关联程度大致相同。这些结果提供了在人类群体中遗传预测的短端粒与长端粒相对影响的定量估计,并为癌症-衰老悖论提供了证据,即在人类中,端粒长度通过对抗性进化力量达到平衡,这些力量作用于最小化肿瘤和非肿瘤疾病。重要的是,我们的结果表明,仅比值比可能在不同的临床情况下产生误导,并且应该从个体和人群水平评估疾病风险,以便对风险因素在人类健康中的作用得出适当的结论。