Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study

L. Libuda, B.-H. Laabs, C. Ludwig, J. Bühlmeier, J. Antel, A. Hinney, R. Naaresh, M. Föcker, J. Hebebrand, I.R. König, T. Peters, Nutrients (2019).

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Journal Article | Published | English
Author
Libuda, LarsLibreCat ; Laabs, Björn-Hergen; Ludwig, Christine; Bühlmeier, JudithLibreCat; Antel, Jochen; Hinney, Anke; Naaresh, Roaa; Föcker, Manuel; Hebebrand, Johannes; König, Inke R.; Peters, Triinu
Abstract
<jats:p>While observational studies show an association between 25(OH)vitamin D concentrations and depressive symptoms, intervention studies, which examine the preventive effects of vitamin D supplementation on the development of depression, are lacking. To estimate the role of lowered 25(OH)vitamin D concentrations in the etiology of depressive disorders, we conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study on depression, i.e., “depressive symptoms” (DS, n = 161,460) and “broad depression” (BD, n = 113,769 cases and 208,811 controls). Six single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), which were genome-wide significantly associated with 25(OH)vitamin D concentrations in 79,366 subjects from the SUNLIGHT genome-wide association study (GWAS), were used as an instrumental variable. None of the six SNPs was associated with DS or BD (all p &gt; 0.05). MR analysis revealed no causal effects of 25(OH)vitamin D concentration, either on DS (inverse variance weighted (IVW); b = 0.025, SE = 0.038, p = 0.52) or on BD (IVW; b = 0.020, SE = 0.012, p = 0.10). Sensitivity analyses confirmed that 25(OH)vitamin D concentrations were not significantly associated with DS or BD. The findings from this MR study indicate no causal relationship between vitamin D concentrations and depressive symptoms, or broad depression. Conflicting findings from observational studies might have resulted from residual confounding or reverse causation.</jats:p>
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Journal Title
Nutrients
Article Number
1085
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Libuda L, Laabs B-H, Ludwig C, et al. Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study. Nutrients. Published online 2019. doi:10.3390/nu11051085
Libuda, L., Laabs, B.-H., Ludwig, C., Bühlmeier, J., Antel, J., Hinney, A., Naaresh, R., Föcker, M., Hebebrand, J., König, I. R., & Peters, T. (2019). Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study. Nutrients, Article 1085. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11051085
@article{Libuda_Laabs_Ludwig_Bühlmeier_Antel_Hinney_Naaresh_Föcker_Hebebrand_König_et al._2019, title={Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study}, DOI={10.3390/nu11051085}, number={1085}, journal={Nutrients}, author={Libuda, Lars and Laabs, Björn-Hergen and Ludwig, Christine and Bühlmeier, Judith and Antel, Jochen and Hinney, Anke and Naaresh, Roaa and Föcker, Manuel and Hebebrand, Johannes and König, Inke R. and et al.}, year={2019} }
Libuda, Lars, Björn-Hergen Laabs, Christine Ludwig, Judith Bühlmeier, Jochen Antel, Anke Hinney, Roaa Naaresh, et al. “Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study.” Nutrients, 2019. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11051085.
L. Libuda et al., “Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study,” Nutrients, Art. no. 1085, 2019, doi: 10.3390/nu11051085.
Libuda, Lars, et al. “Vitamin D and the Risk of Depression: A Causal Relationship? Findings from a Mendelian Randomization Study.” Nutrients, 1085, 2019, doi:10.3390/nu11051085.

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