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Elevated Blood Pressure Increases Pneumonia Risk: Epidemiological Association and Mendelian Randomization in the UK Biobank.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Small studies have correlated hypertension with pneumonia risk; whether this is recapitulated in larger prospective studies, and represents a causal association, is unclear.

Methods

We estimated the risk for prevalent hypertension with incident respiratory diseases over mean follow-up of 8 years among 377,143 British participants in the UK Biobank. Mendelian randomization of blood pressure on pneumonia was implemented using 75 independent, genome-wide significant variants associated with systolic and diastolic blood pressures among 299,024 individuals not in the UK Biobank. Secondary analyses with pulmonary function tests were performed.

Findings

In total, 107,310 participants (30%) had hypertension at UK Biobank enrollment, and 9,969 (3%) developed pneumonia during follow-up. Prevalent hypertension was independently associated with increased risk for incident pneumonia (HR: 1.36; 95% CI: 1.29-1.43; p < 0.001), as well as other incident respiratory diseases. Genetic predisposition to a 5 mm Hg increase in blood pressure was associated with increased risk for incident pneumonia for systolic blood pressure (HR: 1.08; 95% CI: 1.04-1.13; p < 0.001) and diastolic blood pressure (HR: 1.11; 95% CI: 1.03-1.20; p = 0.005). Additionally, consistent with epidemiologic associations, increased blood pressure genetic risk was significantly associated with reduced performance on pulmonary function tests (p < 0.001).

Conclusions

These results suggest that elevated blood pressure increases risk for pneumonia. Maintaining adequate blood pressure control, in addition to other measures, may reduce risk for pneumonia.

Funding

S.M.Z. (1F30HL149180-01), M.H. (T32HL094301-07), and P.N. (R01HL1427, R01HL148565, and R01HL148050) are supported by the National Institutes of Health. J.P. is supported by the John S. LaDue Memorial Fellowship.

SUBMITTER: Zekavat SM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7703520 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Elevated Blood Pressure Increases Pneumonia Risk: Epidemiological Association and Mendelian Randomization in the UK Biobank.

Zekavat Seyedeh M SM   Honigberg Michael M   Pirruccello James P JP   Kohli Puja P   Karlson Elizabeth W EW   Newton-Cheh Christopher C   Zhao Hongyu H   Natarajan Pradeep P  

Med (New York, N.Y.) 20201130 2


<h4>Background</h4>Small studies have correlated hypertension with pneumonia risk; whether this is recapitulated in larger prospective studies, and represents a causal association, is unclear.<h4>Methods</h4>We estimated the risk for prevalent hypertension with incident respiratory diseases over mean follow-up of 8 years among 377,143 British participants in the UK Biobank. Mendelian randomization of blood pressure on pneumonia was implemented using 75 independent, genome-wide significant varian  ...[more]

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