Wei Zhengxiao, Xiong Qingqing, Liang Li, Wu Zhangjun, Chen Zhu
Department of Clinical Laboratory, Public Health Clinical Center of Chengdu, Chengdu, Sichuan, China.
Department of Scientific Research and Teaching, Public Health Clinical Center of Chengdu, Chengdu, Sichuan, China.
Front Nutr. 2024 Aug 8;11:1373179. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1373179. eCollection 2024.
Limited and inconclusive data from observational studies and randomized controlled trials exist on the levels of circulating micronutrients in the blood and their association with respiratory infections.
A Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was conducted to assess the impact of 12 micronutrients on the risk of three types of infections [upper respiratory tract infections (URTI), lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI), and pneumonia] and their 14 subtypes. This study utilized a bidirectional MR approach to evaluate causal relationships and included a range of sensitivity analyses and multivariable MR to address potential heterogeneity and pleiotropy. The threshold for statistical significance was set at < 1.39 × 10.
Meta-analysis revealed that higher levels of circulating copper were significantly associated with a reduced risk of URTI (odds ratio (OR) = 0.926, 95% CI: 0.890 to 0.964, 0.000195). Additionally, copper demonstrated a suggestive association with a reduced risk of LRTI ( 0.0196), and Vitamin B6 was nominally associated with a reduced risk of pneumonia ( 0.048). Subtype analyses further indicated several suggestive associations: copper reduces the risk of acute pharyngitis ( 0.029), vitamin C increases the risk of critical care admissions for pneumonia ( 0.032) and LRTI ( 0.021), and folate reduces the risk of viral pneumonia ( 0.042). No significant connections were observed for other micronutrients.
We observed a genetically predicted potential protective effect of copper in susceptibility to upper respiratory infections. This provides new insights for further research into the role of micronutrients in the prevention and treatment of infection.
关于血液中循环微量营养素水平及其与呼吸道感染的关联,观察性研究和随机对照试验所提供的数据有限且结论不明确。
进行了一项孟德尔随机化(MR)分析,以评估12种微量营养素对三种感染类型[上呼吸道感染(URTI)、下呼吸道感染(LRTI)和肺炎]及其14种亚型风险的影响。本研究采用双向MR方法来评估因果关系,并包括一系列敏感性分析和多变量MR,以解决潜在的异质性和多效性问题。统计学显著性阈值设定为<1.39×10。
荟萃分析显示,循环铜水平较高与URTI风险降低显著相关(优势比(OR)=0.926,95%置信区间:0.890至0.964,P=0.000195)。此外,铜与LRTI风险降低存在提示性关联(P=0.0196),维生素B6与肺炎风险降低存在名义上的关联(P=0.048)。亚型分析进一步表明了几种提示性关联:铜降低急性咽炎风险(P=0.029),维生素C增加肺炎(P=0.032)和LRTI(P=0.021)的重症监护病房入院风险,叶酸降低病毒性肺炎风险(P=0.042)。未观察到其他微量营养素的显著关联。
我们观察到铜在遗传预测的上呼吸道感染易感性方面具有潜在保护作用。这为进一步研究微量营养素在感染预防和治疗中的作用提供了新见解。