Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies

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Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies. / Møllehave, L T; Skaaby, T; Simonsen, K S; Thuesen, B H; Mortensen, Erik Lykke; Sandholt, C H; Pedersen, O; Grarup, N; Hansen, T; Linneberg, A.

In: European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 71, 2017, p. 1054-1060.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Møllehave, LT, Skaaby, T, Simonsen, KS, Thuesen, BH, Mortensen, EL, Sandholt, CH, Pedersen, O, Grarup, N, Hansen, T & Linneberg, A 2017, 'Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies', European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, vol. 71, pp. 1054-1060. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2017.97

APA

Møllehave, L. T., Skaaby, T., Simonsen, K. S., Thuesen, B. H., Mortensen, E. L., Sandholt, C. H., Pedersen, O., Grarup, N., Hansen, T., & Linneberg, A. (2017). Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 71, 1054-1060. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2017.97

Vancouver

Møllehave LT, Skaaby T, Simonsen KS, Thuesen BH, Mortensen EL, Sandholt CH et al. Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2017;71:1054-1060. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2017.97

Author

Møllehave, L T ; Skaaby, T ; Simonsen, K S ; Thuesen, B H ; Mortensen, Erik Lykke ; Sandholt, C H ; Pedersen, O ; Grarup, N ; Hansen, T ; Linneberg, A. / Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies. In: European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2017 ; Vol. 71. pp. 1054-1060.

Bibtex

@article{e302c8a31c974ca9b80cb609f4eb59ae,
title = "Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies",
abstract = "BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Observational studies have suggested low serum levels of vitamin B12 or folate to be risk factors of depression and anxiety. However, these results may be biased by confounding and reverse causation. Mendelian randomization studies are not subject to these limitations. The aim was to examine the association of genetic scores of vitamin B12 and folate-associated alleles with depression and anxiety.SUBJECTS/METHODS: The study included 4126 participants from two Danish population-based studies. Serum vitamin B12 and folate were measured. Weighed allele scores were calculated as the sum of weights (genetic effect sizes) for 12 and two variants increasing circulating levels of vitamin B12 and folate, respectively. Symptoms of depression and anxiety were assessed by the Symptom Check List (SCL)-90-R, and self-reported doctor-diagnosed depression and anxiety.RESULTS: An increased weighed allele score for serum vitamin B12 was associated with decreased odds of a SCL-90-R score above the 90th percentile (OR 0.540 (95%CI 0.302-0.967)) in Health2006 but not in Inter99, in the pooled analysis (OR 0.817 (95%CI 0.331-2.018)) or with other outcomes. The weighed allele score for serum folate was not associated with any of the measured outcome variables: SCL-90-R scores of depression (pooled OR 0.603 (95%CI 0.101-3.602)), anxiety (pooled OR 0.619 (95%CI 0.110-3.495)), combined score or history of doctor-diagnosed depression or anxiety.CONCLUSION: Our results do not provide evidence for a causal effect of circulating folate or vitamin B12 on the risk of depression or anxiety. However, we cannot rule out small to moderate effects, and thus large scale studies are needed.European Journal of Clinical Nutrition advance online publication, 28 June 2017; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2017.97.",
author = "M{\o}llehave, {L T} and T Skaaby and Simonsen, {K S} and Thuesen, {B H} and Mortensen, {Erik Lykke} and Sandholt, {C H} and O Pedersen and N Grarup and T Hansen and A Linneberg",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1038/ejcn.2017.97",
language = "English",
volume = "71",
pages = "1054--1060",
journal = "European Journal of Clinical Nutrition",
issn = "0954-3007",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Association studies of genetic scores of serum vitamin B12 and folate levels with symptoms of depression and anxiety in two danish population studies

AU - Møllehave, L T

AU - Skaaby, T

AU - Simonsen, K S

AU - Thuesen, B H

AU - Mortensen, Erik Lykke

AU - Sandholt, C H

AU - Pedersen, O

AU - Grarup, N

AU - Hansen, T

AU - Linneberg, A

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Observational studies have suggested low serum levels of vitamin B12 or folate to be risk factors of depression and anxiety. However, these results may be biased by confounding and reverse causation. Mendelian randomization studies are not subject to these limitations. The aim was to examine the association of genetic scores of vitamin B12 and folate-associated alleles with depression and anxiety.SUBJECTS/METHODS: The study included 4126 participants from two Danish population-based studies. Serum vitamin B12 and folate were measured. Weighed allele scores were calculated as the sum of weights (genetic effect sizes) for 12 and two variants increasing circulating levels of vitamin B12 and folate, respectively. Symptoms of depression and anxiety were assessed by the Symptom Check List (SCL)-90-R, and self-reported doctor-diagnosed depression and anxiety.RESULTS: An increased weighed allele score for serum vitamin B12 was associated with decreased odds of a SCL-90-R score above the 90th percentile (OR 0.540 (95%CI 0.302-0.967)) in Health2006 but not in Inter99, in the pooled analysis (OR 0.817 (95%CI 0.331-2.018)) or with other outcomes. The weighed allele score for serum folate was not associated with any of the measured outcome variables: SCL-90-R scores of depression (pooled OR 0.603 (95%CI 0.101-3.602)), anxiety (pooled OR 0.619 (95%CI 0.110-3.495)), combined score or history of doctor-diagnosed depression or anxiety.CONCLUSION: Our results do not provide evidence for a causal effect of circulating folate or vitamin B12 on the risk of depression or anxiety. However, we cannot rule out small to moderate effects, and thus large scale studies are needed.European Journal of Clinical Nutrition advance online publication, 28 June 2017; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2017.97.

AB - BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Observational studies have suggested low serum levels of vitamin B12 or folate to be risk factors of depression and anxiety. However, these results may be biased by confounding and reverse causation. Mendelian randomization studies are not subject to these limitations. The aim was to examine the association of genetic scores of vitamin B12 and folate-associated alleles with depression and anxiety.SUBJECTS/METHODS: The study included 4126 participants from two Danish population-based studies. Serum vitamin B12 and folate were measured. Weighed allele scores were calculated as the sum of weights (genetic effect sizes) for 12 and two variants increasing circulating levels of vitamin B12 and folate, respectively. Symptoms of depression and anxiety were assessed by the Symptom Check List (SCL)-90-R, and self-reported doctor-diagnosed depression and anxiety.RESULTS: An increased weighed allele score for serum vitamin B12 was associated with decreased odds of a SCL-90-R score above the 90th percentile (OR 0.540 (95%CI 0.302-0.967)) in Health2006 but not in Inter99, in the pooled analysis (OR 0.817 (95%CI 0.331-2.018)) or with other outcomes. The weighed allele score for serum folate was not associated with any of the measured outcome variables: SCL-90-R scores of depression (pooled OR 0.603 (95%CI 0.101-3.602)), anxiety (pooled OR 0.619 (95%CI 0.110-3.495)), combined score or history of doctor-diagnosed depression or anxiety.CONCLUSION: Our results do not provide evidence for a causal effect of circulating folate or vitamin B12 on the risk of depression or anxiety. However, we cannot rule out small to moderate effects, and thus large scale studies are needed.European Journal of Clinical Nutrition advance online publication, 28 June 2017; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2017.97.

U2 - 10.1038/ejcn.2017.97

DO - 10.1038/ejcn.2017.97

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28656970

VL - 71

SP - 1054

EP - 1060

JO - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition

JF - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition

SN - 0954-3007

ER -

ID: 182933179