Serum Calcium Concentrations and Risk of All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality: Results From 2 Prospective Cohorts.

Journal: The Journal Of Clinical Endocrinology And Metabolism
Published:
Abstract

Context: Calcium plays a critical role in various physiological activities. However, the association between circulating calcium concentrations and mortality in a general healthy population remains undetermined.

Objective: To examine the association of serum calcium concentrations with all-cause and cause-specific mortality.

Methods: Leveraging data from the UK Biobank (n = 361 662) and the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, n = 36 985), we prospectively examined the association of serum calcium concentrations with all-cause and cause-specific mortality using Cox proportional hazard and restricted cubic spline models.

Results: During a median follow-up of 12.0 years, UK Biobank documented 18 327 deaths, including 3119 (17.0%) from cardiovascular disease (CVD) and 9599 (52.4%) from cancer. We found a U-shaped relationship of albumin-adjusted calcium concentrations with all-cause and CVD mortality. Compared with participants with moderate calcium levels (the third quintile, Q3), those with low and high levels had an increased risk of all-cause (hazard ratio [HR] 1.02 for Q1 vs Q3; 1.10 for Q5 vs Q3) and CVD mortality (HR 1.11 for Q1 vs Q3; 1.25 for Q5 vs Q3). In contrast, there was a linear positive relationship with cancer mortality (HR 1.09 for Q5 vs Q1). Similar results for all-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality were observed in US NHANES.

Conclusion: Our findings provide novel insights into the association between serum calcium concentrations and mortality in the general healthy population.

Authors
Mingjia Yang, Junyan Miao, Lingbin Du, Jiayu Wang, Jing Yang, Jiayi Lu, Xikang Fan, Changzhi Huang, Zan Fu, Zekuan Xu, Mingyang Song, Hongxia Ma, Guangfu Jin, Zhibin Hu, Dong Hang, Hongbing Shen