The effect of heavy smoking on retirement risk: A mendelian randomisation analysis
Joint with
Olesya Ajnakina,
Eugenio Zucchelli
and Ruth A. Hackett.
Addictive Behaviors, 2024.
Abstract
Background and aims. The extent to which heavy smoking and retirement risk are causally related remains to be determined. To overcome the endogeneity of heavy smoking behaviour, we employed a novel approach by exploiting the genetic predisposition to heavy smoking, as measured with a polygenic risk score (PGS), in a Mendelian Randomisation approach.
Methods. 8,164 participants (mean age 68.86 years) from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing had complete data on smoking behaviour, employment and a heavy smoking PGS. Heavy smoking was indexed as smoking at least 20 cigarettes a day. A time-to-event Mendelian Randomization (MR) analysis, using a complementary log–log (cloglog) link function, was employed to model the retirement risk.
Results. Our results show that being a heavy smoker significantly increases the risk of retirement (β = 1.324, standard error = 0.622, p < 0.05). Results were robust to a battery of checks and a placebo analysis considering the never-smokers.
Conclusions. Overall, our findings support a causal pathway from heavy smoking to earlier retirement.
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