School of Medical Technology, North Minzu University, Yinchuan, China.
Orthopedics Department, Tianjin Hospital, Tianjin, China.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2023 May 30;14:1179656. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2023.1179656. eCollection 2023.
Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data showed that the relationship between hypothyroidism and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) risk remains under debate. This study is conducted to test the causal relationship of hypothyroidism and RA.
A two-sample Mendelian randomization (TSMR) analysis was employed to estimate the causality of hypothyroidism and rheumatoid arthritis in European ancestry and Asian ancestry. Integrating the effects generated by TSMR, functional annotations and noncoding variant prediction framework were applied to analyze and interpret the functional instrument variants (IVs).
The results of the inverse variance weighted method showed a strong significant causal relationship between hypothyroidism and risk of RA in European ancestry [odds ratio (OR) = 1.96; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.49, 2.58; < 0.001]. The outcomes of MR-Egger, weighted median, weighted mode, and simple mode also showed that hypothyroidism was significantly associated with increased risk of RA in European ancestry. The MR-PRESSO method also showed significant results [Outlier-corrected Causal Estimate = 0.70; standard error (SE) = 0.06; < 0.001]. An independent dataset and an Asian ancestry dataset were applied to estimate and obtain the coincident results. Furthermore, we integrated the effect of variants in TSMR analysis, functional annotations, and prediction methods to pinpoint the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs4409785 as one of the causal variants, which suggested that this variant could impact the binding of CTCF-cohesin and play a vital role in immune cells.
In this study, we prove that hypothyroidism is significantly causally associated with increased RA risk, which has not been shown in previous studies. Furthermore, we pinpoint the potential causal variants in RA.
全基因组关联研究(GWAS)的数据荟萃分析表明,甲状腺功能减退症与类风湿关节炎(RA)风险之间的关系仍存在争议。本研究旨在检验甲状腺功能减退症与 RA 之间的因果关系。
采用两样本 Mendelian 随机化(TSMR)分析来估计欧洲裔和亚洲裔人群中甲状腺功能减退症与类风湿关节炎之间的因果关系。整合 TSMR 产生的效应,并应用功能注释和非编码变异预测框架来分析和解释功能工具变异(IVs)。
逆方差加权法的结果表明,在欧洲裔人群中,甲状腺功能减退症与 RA 风险之间存在强烈的因果关系[比值比(OR)=1.96;95%置信区间(CI)1.49,2.58;<0.001]。MR-Egger、加权中位数、加权模式和简单模式的结果也表明,甲状腺功能减退症与欧洲裔人群中 RA 风险的增加显著相关。MR-PRESSO 方法也显示出显著的结果[校正后的因果估计值=0.70;标准误差(SE)=0.06;<0.001]。应用独立数据集和亚洲裔人群数据集进行估计并获得了一致的结果。此外,我们整合了 TSMR 分析、功能注释和预测方法的效应,确定单核苷酸多态性(SNP)rs4409785 为因果变异之一,该变异可能影响 CTCF-cohesin 的结合,并在免疫细胞中发挥重要作用。
在本研究中,我们证明了甲状腺功能减退症与 RA 风险增加之间存在显著的因果关系,这在以前的研究中尚未显示。此外,我们还确定了 RA 中的潜在因果变异。