Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Evidence for causal effects of lifetime smoking on risk for depression and schizophrenia: a Mendelian randomisation study

Robyn E. Wootton, Rebecca C. Richmond, Bobby Stuijfzand, Rebecca B. Lawn, Hannah Sallis, Gemma Taylor, Gibran Hemani, Hannah Jones, Stanley Zammit, George Davey Smith, Marcus R. Munafò

Psychological Medicine · 2019

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Summary

BACKGROUND: Smoking prevalence is higher amongst individuals with schizophrenia and depression compared with the general population. Mendelian randomisation (MR) can examine whether this association is causal using genetic variants identified in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). METHODS: We conducted two-sample MR to explore the bi-directional effects of smoking on schizophrenia and depression. For smoking behaviour, we used (1) smoking initiation GWAS from the GSCAN consortium and (2) we conducted our own GWAS of lifetime smoking behaviour (which captures smoking duration, heaviness and cessation) in a sample of 462690 individuals from the UK Biobank. We validated this instrument using positive control outcomes (e.g. lung cancer). For schizophrenia and depression we used GWAS from t

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1017/s0033291719002678
Catalogue ID
BFmokjo8sc-tspnsb
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