Q
Qingning Wang
Researcher at University of Leicester
Publications - 7
Citations - 146
Qingning Wang is an academic researcher from University of Leicester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Odds ratio & Cohort study. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 6 publications receiving 19 citations. Previous affiliations of Qingning Wang include Glenfield Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Polygenic basis and biomedical consequences of telomere length variation.
Veryan Codd,Veryan Codd,Qingning Wang,Qingning Wang,Elias Allara,Elias Allara,Crispin Musicha,Crispin Musicha,Stephen Kaptoge,Stephen Kaptoge,Svetlana Stoma,Tao Jiang,Stephen E. Hamby,Stephen E. Hamby,Peter S. Braund,Vasiliki Bountziouka,Vasiliki Bountziouka,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Matthew Denniff,Chloe Swinfield,Manolo Papakonstantinou,Shilpi Sheth,Dominika E Nanus,Sophie C Warner,Minxian Wang,Minxian Wang,Amit Khera,James Eales,Willem H. Ouwehand,John R Thompson,Emanuele Di Angelantonio,Angela M. Wood,Adam S. Butterworth,John Danesh,Christopher P. Nelson,Christopher P. Nelson,Nilesh J. Samani,Nilesh J. Samani +39 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors characterize the genetic architecture of naturally occurring variation in leukocyte telomere length (LTL) and identify causal links between LTL and biomedical phenotypes in 472,174 well-characterized UK Biobank participants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Shorter leukocyte telomere length is associated with adverse COVID-19 outcomes: A cohort study in UK Biobank.
Qingning Wang,Qingning Wang,Veryan Codd,Veryan Codd,Zahra Raisi-Estabragh,Zahra Raisi-Estabragh,Crispin Musicha,Vasiliki Bountziouka,Stephen Kaptoge,Elias Allara,Elias Allara,Emanuele Di Angelantonio,Adam S. Butterworth,Angela M. Wood,John R. Thompson,Steffen E. Petersen,Steffen E. Petersen,Nicholas C. Harvey,Nicholas C. Harvey,John Danesh,Nilesh J. Samani,Nilesh J. Samani,Christopher P. Nelson,Christopher P. Nelson +23 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that shorter leucocyte telomere length (LTL) is associated with higher risk of adverse COVID-19 outcomes, independent of several major risk factors including age.
Posted ContentDOI
A major population resource of 474,074 participants in UK Biobank to investigate determinants and biomedical consequences of leukocyte telomere length
Codd,Codd,Matthew Denniff,Chloe Swinfield,Sophie C Warner,Manolo Papakonstantinou,Shilpi Sheth,Dominika E Nanus,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Crispin Musicha,Crispin Musicha,Bountziouka,Bountziouka,Qingning Wang,Qingning Wang,Bramley R,Bramley R,Elias Allara,Elias Allara,Stephen Kaptoge,Stephen Kaptoge,Svetlana Stoma,Tao Jiang,Adam S. Butterworth,Angela M. Wood,Di Angelantonio E,John F. Thompson,Danesh J,Christopher P. Nelson,Christopher P. Nelson,Nilesh J. Samani,Nilesh J. Samani +33 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants and biomedical consequences of variation in leukocyte telomere length (LTL), a proposed marker of biological age, are only partially understood.
Posted ContentDOI
Polygenic basis and biomedical consequences of telomere length variation.
Veryan Codd,Veryan Codd,Qingning Wang,Qingning Wang,Elias Allara,Elias Allara,Crispin Musicha,Crispin Musicha,Stephen Kaptoge,Stephen Kaptoge,Svetlana Stoma,Tao Jiang,Stephen E. Hamby,Stephen E. Hamby,Peter S. Braund,Vasiliki Bountziouka,Vasiliki Bountziouka,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Charley A. Budgeon,Matthew Denniff,Chloe Swinfield,Manolo Papakonstantinou,Shilpi Sheth,Dominika E Nanus,Sophie C Warner,Minxian Wang,Minxian Wang,Amit Khera,James Eales,Willem H. Ouwehand,John R Thompson,Emanuele Di Angelantonio,Angela M. Wood,Adam S. Butterworth,John Danesh,Christopher P. Nelson,Christopher P. Nelson,Nilesh J. Samani,Nilesh J. Samani +39 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Health Data Research UK EU/EFPIA Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking Big Data@Heart (11607) was used to build a Big Data platform for health data.
Posted ContentDOI
Older biological age is associated with adverse COVID-19 outcomes: A cohort study in UK Biobank
Qingning Wang,Qingning Wang,Codd,Codd,Zahra Raisi-Estabragh,Zahra Raisi-Estabragh,Crispin Musicha,Crispin Musicha,Bountziouka,Bountziouka,Stephen Kaptoge,Stephen Kaptoge,Elias Allara,Elias Allara,Emanuele Di Angelantonio,Adam S. Butterworth,Angela M. Wood,Thompson,Steffen E. Petersen,Steffen E. Petersen,Nicholas C. Harvey,Nicholas C. Harvey,Danesh J,Nilesh J. Samani,Nilesh J. Samani,Christopher P. Nelson,Christopher P. Nelson +26 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used leucocyte telomere length (LTL) values obtained from participants recruited into UK Biobank (UKB) during 2006-2010 with adverse COVID-19 outcomes recorded by 30 November 2020 to evaluate whether observational associations might reflect cause-and-effect relationships.