scholarly journals Genetic support of a causal relationship between Iron status and atrial fibrillation: a Mendelian randomization study

Author(s):  
Tianyi Wang ◽  
Jun Cheng ◽  
Yanggan Wang

Background Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia disease.Animal and observational studies have found a link between iron status and atrial fibrillation. However, the causal relationship between iron status and the risk of atrial fibrillation may be biased by confounding and reverse causality.The purpose of this investigation was to use Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis, which has been widely appied to estimate the causal effect,to reveal whether systemic iron status was causally related to atrial fibrillation. Methods Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) strongly associated (P< 5.10-8) with four biomarkers of systemic iron status were obtained from a genome-wide association study involving 48,972 subjects conducted by the Genetics of Iron Status consortium. Summary-level data for the genetic associations with atrial fibrillation were acquired from AFGen (Atrial Fibrillation Genetics) consortium study( including 65,446 atrial fibrillation cases and 522,744 controls) .We used a two-sample MR analysis to obtain a causal estimate, and further verified credibility through sensitivity analysis. Results Genetically instrumented serum iron [OR:1.09;95%; confidence interval (CI)1.02-1.16; p=0.01], ferritin [OR:1.16;95%CI:1.02-1.33; p=0.02], and transferrin saturation [OR:1.05;95%CI:1.01-1.11; p=0.01] had positive effects on atrial fibrillation. Genetically instrumented transferrin levels [OR:0.90;95%CI:0.86-0.97; p=0.006] was an inverse correlation with atrial fibrillation. Conclusion In conclusion,our results strongly elucidated a causal link between genetically determined higher iron status and increased the risk of atrial fibrillation.This provided new ideas for clinical prevention and treatment of atrial fibrillation.

Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuai Yuan ◽  
Paul Carter ◽  
Mathew Vithayathil ◽  
Siddhartha Kar ◽  
Edward Giovannucci ◽  
...  

We conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization study to explore the associations of iron status with overall cancer and 22 site-specific cancers. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms for iron status were obtained from a genome-wide association study of 48,972 European-descent individuals. Summary-level data for breast and other cancers were obtained from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium and UK Biobank. Genetically predicted iron status was positively associated with liver cancer and inversely associated with brain cancer but not associated with overall cancer or the other 20 studied cancer sites at p < 0.05. The odds ratios of liver cancer were 2.45 (95% CI, 0.81, 7.45; p = 0.11), 2.11 (1.16, 3.83; p = 0.02), 10.89 (2.44, 48.59; p = 0.002) and 0.30 (0.17, 0.53; p = 2 × 10−5) for one standard deviation increment of serum iron, transferrin saturation, ferritin and transferrin levels, respectively. For brain cancer, the corresponding odds ratios were 0.69 (0.48, 1.00; p = 0.05), 0.75 (0.59, 0.97; p = 0.03), 0.41 (0.20, 0.88; p = 0.02) and 1.49 (1.04, 2.14; p = 0.03). Genetically high iron status was positively associated with liver cancer and inversely associated with brain cancer.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiahao Cai ◽  
Xiong Chen ◽  
Hongxuan Wang ◽  
Zixin Wei ◽  
Mei Li ◽  
...  

BackgroundObservational studies have shown an association of increased iron status with a higher risk of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Iron status might be a novel target for ALS prevention if a causal relationship exists. We aimed to reveal the causality between iron status and ALS incidence using a large two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR).MethodsSingle nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for iron status were identified from a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on 48,972 individuals. The outcome data came from the largest ALS GWAS to date (20,806 cases; 59,804 controls). We conducted conservative analyses (using SNPs with concordant change of biomarkers of iron status) and liberal analyses (using SNPs associated with at least one of the biomarkers of iron status), with inverse variance weighted (IVW) method as the main analysis. We then performed sensitivity analyses including weighted median, MR-Egger and MR-pleiotropy residual sum and outlier, as well as leave-one-out analysis to detect pleiotropy.ResultsIn the conservative analyses, we found no evidence of association between four biomarkers of iron status and ALS using IVW method with odds ratio (OR) 1.00 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.90–1.11] per standard deviation (SD) increase in iron, 0.96 (95% CI: 0.77–1.21) in ferritin, 0.99 (95% CI: 0.92–1.07) in transferrin saturation, and 1.04 (95% CI: 0.93–1.16) in transferrin. Findings from liberal analyses were similar, and sensitivity analyses suggested no pleiotropy detected (all p &gt; 0.05).ConclusionOur findings suggest no causal effect between iron status and risk of ALS. Efforts to change the iron status to decrease ALS incidence might be impractical.


2021 ◽  
pp. 174749302110062
Author(s):  
Bin Yan ◽  
Jian Yang ◽  
Li Qian ◽  
Fengjie Gao ◽  
Ling Bai ◽  
...  

Background: Observational studies have found an association between visceral adiposity and stroke. Aims: The purpose of this study was to investigate the role and genetic effect of visceral adipose tissue (VAT) accumulation on stroke and its subtypes. Methods: In this two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study, genetic variants (221 single nucleotide polymorphisms; P<5×10-8) using as instrumental variables for MR analysis was obtained from a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of VAT. The outcome datasets for stroke and its subtypes were obtained from the MEGASTROKE consortium (up to 67,162 cases and 453,702 controls). MR standard analysis (inverse variance weighted method) was conducted to investigate the effect of genetic liability to visceral adiposity on stroke and its subtypes. Sensitivity analysis (MR-Egger, weighted median, MR-PRESSO) were also utilized to assess horizontal pleiotropy and remove outliers. Multi-variable MR analysis was employed to adjust potential confounders. Results: In the standard MR analysis, genetically determined visceral adiposity (per 1 SD) was significantly associated with a higher risk of stroke (odds ratio [OR] 1.30; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.21-1.41, P=1.48×10-11), ischemic stroke (OR 1.30; 95% CI 1.20-1.41, P=4.01×10-10), and large artery stroke (OR 1.49; 95% CI 1.22-1.83, P=1.16×10-4). The significant association was also found in sensitivity analysis and multi-variable MR analysis. Conclusions: Genetic liability to visceral adiposity was significantly associated with an increased risk of stroke, ischemic stroke, and large artery stroke. The effect of genetic susceptibility to visceral adiposity on the stroke warrants further investigation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 971-980 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. H. Gage ◽  
H. J. Jones ◽  
S. Burgess ◽  
J. Bowden ◽  
G. Davey Smith ◽  
...  

BackgroundObservational associations between cannabis and schizophrenia are well documented, but ascertaining causation is more challenging. We used Mendelian randomization (MR), utilizing publicly available data as a method for ascertaining causation from observational data.MethodWe performed bi-directional two-sample MR using summary-level genome-wide data from the International Cannabis Consortium (ICC) and the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC2). Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with cannabis initiation (p < 10−5) and schizophrenia (p < 5 × 10−8) were combined using an inverse-variance-weighted fixed-effects approach. We also used height and education genome-wide association study data, representing negative and positive control analyses.ResultsThere was some evidence consistent with a causal effect of cannabis initiation on risk of schizophrenia [odds ratio (OR) 1.04 per doubling odds of cannabis initiation, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01–1.07, p = 0.019]. There was strong evidence consistent with a causal effect of schizophrenia risk on likelihood of cannabis initiation (OR 1.10 per doubling of the odds of schizophrenia, 95% CI 1.05–1.14, p = 2.64 × 10−5). Findings were as predicted for the negative control (height: OR 1.00, 95% CI 0.99–1.01, p = 0.90) but weaker than predicted for the positive control (years in education: OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.97–1.00, p = 0.066) analyses.ConclusionsOur results provide some that cannabis initiation increases the risk of schizophrenia, although the size of the causal estimate is small. We find stronger evidence that schizophrenia risk predicts cannabis initiation, possibly as genetic instruments for schizophrenia are stronger than for cannabis initiation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 90-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dylan M Williams ◽  
Sara Hägg ◽  
Nancy L Pedersen

ABSTRACT Background Higher circulating antioxidant concentrations are associated with a lower risk of late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD) in observational studies, suggesting that diet-sourced antioxidants may be modifiable targets for reducing disease risk. However, observational evidence is prone to substantial biases that limit causal inference, including residual confounding and reverse causation. Objectives In order to infer whether long-term circulating antioxidant exposure plays a role in AD etiology, we tested the hypothesis that AD risk would be lower in individuals with lifelong, genetically predicted increases in concentrations of 4 circulating antioxidants that are modifiable by diet. Methods Two-sample Mendelian randomization analyses were conducted. First, published genetic association studies were used to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that determine variation in circulating ascorbate (vitamin C), β-carotene, retinol (vitamin A), and urate. Second, for each set of SNP data, statistics for genotype associations with AD risk were extracted from data of a genome-wide association study of late-onset AD cases and controls (n = 17,008 and 37,154, respectively). Ratio-of-coefficients and inverse-variance-weighted meta-analyses were the primary methods used to assess the 4 sets of SNP-exposure and SNP-AD associations. Additional analyses assessed the potential impact of bias from pleiotropy on estimates. Results The models suggested that genetically determined differences in circulating ascorbate, retinol, and urate are not associated with differences in AD risk. All estimates were close to the null, with all ORs for AD ≥1 per unit increase in antioxidant exposure (ranging from 1.00 for ascorbate to 1.05 for retinol). There was little evidence to imply that pleiotropy had biased results. Conclusions Our findings suggest that higher exposure to ascorbate, β-carotene, retinol, or urate does not lower the risk of AD. Replication Mendelian randomization studies could assess this further, providing larger AD case-control samples and, ideally, using additional variants to instrument each exposure.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yalan Li ◽  
Jun Lu ◽  
Jie Wang ◽  
Peizhi Deng ◽  
Changjiang Meng ◽  
...  

Background: Observational studies have revealed the association between some inflammatory cytokines and the occurrence of ischemic stroke, but the causal relationships remain unclear.Methods: We conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to assess the causal effects of thirty inflammatory cytokines and the risk of ischemic stroke. For exposure data, we collected genetic variants associated with inflammatory cytokines as instrumental variables (IVs) from a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis from Finland (sample size up to 8,293). For the outcome data, we collected summary data of ischemic stroke from a large-scale GWAS meta-analysis involved 17 studies (34,217 cases and 406,111 controls). We further performed a series of sensitivity analyses as validation of primary MR results.Results: According to the primary MR estimations and further sensitivity analyses, we established one robust association after Bonferroni correction: the odds ratio (95% CI) per unit change in genetically increased IL-4 was 0.84 (0.89–0.95) for ischemic stroke. The chemokine MCP3 showed a nominally significant association with ischemic stroke risk (OR: 0.93, 95% CI: 0.88–0.99, unadjusted p &lt; 0.05). There was no evidence of a causal effect of other inflammatory cytokines and the risk of ischemic stroke.Conclusions: Our study suggested that genetically increased IL-4 levels showed a protective effect on the risk of ischemic stroke, which provides important new insights into the potential therapeutic target for preventing ischemic stroke.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunyu Li ◽  
Ruwei Ou ◽  
Qianqian Wei ◽  
Huifang Shang

Background: Carnitine, a potential substitute or supplementation for dexamethasone, might protect against COVID-19 based on its molecular functions. However, the correlation between carnitine and COVID-19 has not been explored yet, and whether there exists causation is unknown.Methods: A two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was conducted to explore the causal relationship between carnitine level and COVID-19. Significant single nucleotide polymorphisms from genome-wide association study on carnitine (N = 7,824) were utilized as exposure instruments, and summary statistics of the susceptibility (N = 1,467,264), severity (N = 714,592) and hospitalization (N = 1,887,658) of COVID-19 were utilized as the outcome. The causal relationship was evaluated by multiplicative random effects inverse variance weighted (IVW) method, and further verified by another three MR methods including MR Egger, weighted median, and weighted mode, as well as extensive sensitivity analyses.Results: Genetically determined one standard deviation increase in carnitine amount was associated with lower susceptibility (OR: 0.38, 95% CI: 0.19–0.74, P: 4.77E−03) of COVID-19. Carnitine amount was also associated with lower severity and hospitalization of COVID-19 using another three MR methods, though the association was not significant using the IVW method but showed the same direction of effect. The results were robust under all sensitivity analyses.Conclusions: A genetic predisposition to high carnitine levels might reduce the susceptibility and severity of COVID-19. These results provide better understandings on the role of carnitine in the COVID-19 pathogenesis, and facilitate novel therapeutic targets for COVID-19 in future clinical trials.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Po-Chun Chiu ◽  
Amrita Chattopadhyay ◽  
Meng-Chun Wu ◽  
Tzu-Hung Hsiao ◽  
Ching-Heng Lin ◽  
...  

Hypertension has been reported as a major risk factor for diseases such as cardiovascular disease, and associations between platelet activation and risk for hypertension are well-established. However, the exact nature of causality between them remains unclear. In this study, a bi-directional Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was conducted on 15,996 healthy Taiwanese individuals aged between 30 and 70 years from the Taiwan Biobank, recorded between 2008 and 2015. The inverse variance weighted (IVW) method was applied to determine the causal relationship between platelet count and hypertension with single nucleotide polymorphisms as instrumental variables (IVs). Furthermore, to check for pleiotropy and validity of the IVs, sensitivity analyses were performed using the MR-Egger, weighted median and simple median methods. This study provided evidence in support of a positive causal effect of platelet count on the risk of hypertension (odds ratio: 1.149, 95% confidence interval: 1.131–1.578, P &lt; 0.05), using the weighted median method. A significant causal effect of platelet count on hypertension was observed using the IVW method. No pleiotropy was observed. The causal effect of hypertension on platelet count was found to be non-significant. Therefore, the findings from this study provide evidence that higher platelet count may have a significant causal effect on the elevated risk of hypertension for the general population of Taiwan.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuanlong Hu ◽  
Xiaomeng Cheng ◽  
Huaiyu Mao ◽  
Xianhai Chen ◽  
Yue Cui ◽  
...  

Background/Aim: Several observational studies showed a significant association between elevated iron status biomarkers levels and sepsis with the unclear direction of causality. A two-sample bidirectional mendelian randomization (MR) study was designed to identify the causal direction between seven iron status traits and sepsis.Methods: Seven iron status traits were studied, including serum iron, ferritin, transferrin saturation, transferrin, hemoglobin, erythrocyte count, and reticulocyte count. MR analysis was first performed to estimate the causal effect of iron status on the risk of sepsis and then performed in the opposite direction. The multiplicative random-effects and fixed-effects inverse-variance weighted, weighted median-based method and MR-Egger were applied. MR-Egger regression, MR pleiotropy residual sum and outlier (MR-PRESSO), and Cochran's Q statistic methods were used to assess heterogeneity and pleiotropy.Results: Genetically predicted high levels of serum iron (OR = 1.21, 95%CI = 1.13–1.29, p = 3.16 × 10−4), ferritin (OR = 1.32, 95%CI = 1.07–1.62, p =0.009) and transferrin saturation (OR = 1.14, 95%CI = 1.06–1.23, p = 5.43 × 10−4) were associated with an increased risk of sepsis. No significant causal relationships between sepsis and other four iron status biomarkers were observed.Conclusions: This present bidirectional MR analysis suggested the causal association of the high iron status with sepsis susceptibility, while the reverse causality hypothesis did not hold. The levels of transferrin, hemoglobin, erythrocytes, and reticulocytes were not significantly associated with sepsis. Further studies will be required to confirm the potential clinical value of such a prevention and treatment strategy.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Songzan Chen ◽  
Fangkun Yan ◽  
Tian Xu ◽  
Yao Wang ◽  
Kaijie Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Although several observational studies have shown an association between birth weight (BW) and atrial fibrillation (AF), controversy remains. In this study, we aimed to explore the role of elevated BW on the etiology of AF. Methods A two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study was designed to infer the causality. The genetic data on the associations of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with BW and AF were separately obtained from two large-scale genome-wide association study with up to 321,223 and 1,030,836 individuals respectively. SNPs were identified at a genome-wide significant level (p-value < 5 × 10− 8). The inverse variance-weighted (IVW) with fixed effects method was performed to obtain causal estimates as our primary analysis. MR-Egger regression was conducted to assess the pleiotropy and sensitivity analyses with various statistical methods were applied to evaluate the robustness of the results. Results In total, 122 SNPs were identified as the genetic instrumental variables. MR analysis revealed a causal effect of elevated BW on AF (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.13–1.29, p-value = 2.39 × 10− 8). The MR-Egger regression suggested no evidence of directional pleiotropy (intercept = 0.00, p-value = 0.62). All the results in sensitivity analyses were consistent with the primary result, which confirmed the causal association between BW and AF. Conclusions The findings from the two-sample MR study indicate a causal effect of elevated BW on AF. This suggests a convenient and effective method to ease the burden of AF by reducing the number of newborns with elevated BW.


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