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Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
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Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
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Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations

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Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations
Journal Article

Causal relationship between dyslipidemia and risk of facial aging: Insights from Mendelian randomization in East Asian populations

2024
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Overview
Background Emerging observational studies showed an association between dyslipidemia and aging. However, it remains unclear whether this association is causal, particularly in the case of Asians, which are aging more rapidly than other continents. Given the visible manifestations of aging often include changes in facial appearance, the objective of this study is to assess the causal relationship between dyslipidemia and facial aging in East Asian populations. Methods SNPs related to dyslipidemia in East Asian people such as Total cholesterol (TC), High‐density‐lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL), Low‐density‐lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL), and Triglyceride (TG) along with outcomes data on facial aging, were extracted from public genome‐wide association studies (GWAS). A two‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was then performed using publicly available GWAS data to investigate the potential causal relationship. The effect estimates were primarily calculated using the fixed‐effects inverse variance weighted (IVW) method. Results Totally, 88 SNPs related to HDL among 70657 East Asian participants in GWAS. Based on the primary causal effects model using MR analyses with the IVW method, high HDL level was demonstrated as significantly related to the risk of facial aging (OR, 1.060; 95% CI, 1.005–1.119, p = 0.034), while high TC level (OR, 0.995; 95% CI, 0.920–1.076, p = 0.903), high LDL level (OR, 0.980, 95% CI, 0.924–1.041, p = 0.515), as well as high TG level (OR, 0.999, 95% CI, 0.932–1.071, p = 0.974), showed no significant correlation with facial aging. Conclusions The two‐sample MR analysis conducted in this study revealed a positive causal relationship between high HDL levels and facial aging. In contrast, facial aging demonstrated no significant correlation with high levels of TC, LDL, or TG. Further large‐sample prospective studies are needed to validate these findings and to provide appropriate recommendations regarding nutrition management to delay the aging process among old patients in East Asia.