Causal Relationships Between Major Depressive Disorder and Coronary Artery Disease Across Diverse Populations: A Bidirectional Mendelian Randomisation Study
Sarah Silva, Dorothea Nitsch, Segun Fatumo

TL;DR
This study explores the genetic link between depression and heart disease in different populations, finding a causal relationship in Europeans and suggesting ancestry-specific differences.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence of ancestry-specific variation in the causal relationship between depression and coronary artery disease.
Findings
Genetically predicted depression increases coronary artery disease risk in Europeans.
An inverse association between coronary artery disease and depression was observed in East Asians but not confirmed.
No significant causal effects were found in African ancestry populations due to limited data.
Abstract
Coronary artery disease remains the leading cause of cardiovascular mortality worldwide, with a disproportionate burden in low‐ and middle‐income countries. Although observational studies have established a bidirectional relationship between depression and coronary artery disease, the underlying genetic basis of this association remains unclear, particularly in underrepresented diverse‐ancestry populations. Establishing whether this relationship is causal and whether it differs by ancestry is critical for informing targeted and equitable prevention strategies. This study employed a bidirectional two‐sample Mendelian randomisation framework to investigate the causal relationship between major depressive disorder and coronary artery disease across East Asian, European and African populations. Using summary statistics from large‐scale genome‐wide association studies, we assessed both the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic Associations and Epidemiology · Sex and Gender in Healthcare · Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology
