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Author(s):
Melanie A de Lange, Neil M Davies, Louise A C Millard, Kate Tilling
Publish date:
31 August 2024
Journal:
American Journal of Epidemiology
PubMed ID:
39218436

Abstract

A child’s relative age within their school year (“relative age”) is associated with educational attainment and mental health. However, hypothesis-driven studies often re-examine the same outcomes and exposure, potentially leading to confirmation and reporting biases and missing unknown effects. Hypothesis-free outcome-wide analyses can potentially overcome these limitations. We conducted a hypothesis-free investigation of the effects of relative age within school year. We performed an instrumental variable (IV) phenome-wide association study in the UK Biobank (participants aged 40-69 years at baseline), using the PHESANT software package. We created 2 IVs for relative age: being born in September vs August (n = 64 075) and week of birth (n = 383 309). Outcomes passing the Bonferroni-corrected P value threshold for either instrument were plotted to identify a discontinuity at the school year transition. Thirteen traits associated with at least 1 of the instruments showed a discontinuity. Previously identified effects included those with a younger relative age being less likely to have educational qualifications and more likely to have started smoking at a younger age. We detected a few associations not explored by previous studies. For example, those of younger relative age had better lung function as adults. Hypothesis-free approaches could help address confirmation and reporting biases in epidemiology.

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We aim to test a novel method for identifying potentially causal associations, which we call the Mendelian randomisation phenome-wide association study (MR-pheWAS) approach. We aim…

Institution:
University of Bristol, Great Britain

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