Sun Xian, Zhang Shuoqiu, Zhou Xi
School of Integrative Medicine, Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Nanjing, China.
Jiangsu Research Center for Chinese Medicine Development, Nanjing, China.
Front Nutr. 2024 Nov 11;11:1430280. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1430280. eCollection 2024.
Observational studies suggest a potential link between obesity and constipation, but existing results are conflicting. Therefore, we conducted a Mendelian randomization (MR) study and meta-analysis to assess the causal relationship between obesity and the risk of constipation.
In this study, independent genetic variants closely related to constipation were acquired from a genome-wide association study (GWAS) to analyze the relationship between genetically predisposed obesity and the risk of constipation. Waist circumference (WC), hip circumference (HC), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), and body mass index (BMI) were collected from the GWAS. Then, the causal relationship between constipation and obesity was explored using a two-sample MR study in both directions. The robustness of the results was evaluated using sensitivity analysis. Furthermore, a systemic review and meta-analysis were performed to calculate relative risks (RRs) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs). Subgroup analyses stratified by age and obesity degree were completed. To evaluate whether the current studies were affected by unmeasured confounders, -values of each study were determined.
In MR analysis, the incidence of constipation increased with the increase in BMI [inverse variance-weighted (IVW) odds ratio (OR) = 1.138 (1.029, 1.260), = 0.012]. In addition, constipation was impacted by WC [IVW OR = 1.220 (1.061, 1.402), = 0.005]. However, there was no evidence that WHR [IVW OR = 1.833 (0.826, 4.065), = 0.136] or HC [IVW OR = 0.949, (0.836, 1.077), = 0.415] has a causal effect on constipation. In reverse MR analysis, there was no evidence supporting the causality between constipation and obesity [BMI IVW OR = 1.010 (0.998, 1.022), = 0.089; WHR IVW OR = 1.000 (0.946, 1.057), = 0.994; WC IVW OR = 1.008 (0.995, 1.022), = 0.217; HC IVW OR = 0.996 (0.982, 1.011), = 0.626]. In the meta-analysis, 14 eligible articles were included, involving 43,488 subjects. According to the results of the meta-analysis, the risk of obesity and overweight significantly increased the risk of constipation [RR = 1.145 (0.952, 1.376)]. This was consistent with the MR analysis results. Moreover, overweight and obesity were significantly related to a higher constipation risk among children [overweight RR = 1.112 (0.943, 1.312); obesity RR = 1.407 (1.282, 1.544)]. Additionally, overweight in adults could decrease the risk of constipation [RR = 0.940 (0.827, 1.068)]. Nevertheless, no significant association was observed between obesity in adults and the risk of constipation [RR = 1.000 (0.768, 1.303)]. Sensitivity analysis revealed the robustness of our findings.
In this combined MR study and meta-analysis, obesity is associated with an increased risk of constipation. The MR analysis demonstrates the causal relationship between genetically predisposed obesity and the risk of constipation. More research is required to investigate the potential correlation between obesity and the risk of constipation and associated mechanisms.
观察性研究表明肥胖与便秘之间可能存在联系,但现有结果相互矛盾。因此,我们进行了一项孟德尔随机化(MR)研究和荟萃分析,以评估肥胖与便秘风险之间的因果关系。
在本研究中,从全基因组关联研究(GWAS)中获取与便秘密切相关的独立基因变异,以分析遗传易感性肥胖与便秘风险之间的关系。从GWAS中收集腰围(WC)、臀围(HC)、腰臀比(WHR)和体重指数(BMI)。然后,使用双向双样本MR研究探索便秘与肥胖之间的因果关系。通过敏感性分析评估结果的稳健性。此外,进行了系统评价和荟萃分析,以计算相对风险(RRs)及相应的95%置信区间(95% CIs)。完成了按年龄和肥胖程度分层的亚组分析。为评估当前研究是否受到未测量混杂因素的影响,确定了每项研究的P值。
在MR分析中,便秘的发生率随BMI的增加而增加[逆方差加权(IVW)比值比(OR) = 1.138(1.029,1.260),P = 0.012]。此外,便秘受WC的影响[IVW OR = 1.220(1.061,1.402),P = 0.005]。然而,没有证据表明WHR[IVW OR = 1.833(0.826,4.065),P = 0.136]或HC[IVW OR = 0.949,(0.836,1.077),P = 0.415]对便秘有因果效应。在反向MR分析中,没有证据支持便秘与肥胖之间的因果关系[BMI IVW OR = 1.010(0.998,1.022),P = 0.089;WHR IVW OR = 1.000(0.946,1.057),P = 0.994;WC IVW OR = 1.008(0.995,1.022),P = 0.217;HC IVW OR = 0.996(0.982,1.011),P = 0.626]。在荟萃分析中,纳入了14篇符合条件的文章,涉及43488名受试者。根据荟萃分析结果,肥胖和超重风险显著增加便秘风险[RR = 1.145(0.952,1.376)]。这与MR分析结果一致。此外,超重和肥胖与儿童便秘风险较高显著相关[超重RR = 1.112(0.943,1.312);肥胖RR = 1.407(1.282,1.544)]。此外,成年人超重可降低便秘风险[RR = 0.940(0.827,1.068)]。然而,未观察到成年人肥胖与便秘风险之间存在显著关联[RR = 1.000(0.768,1.303)]。敏感性分析揭示了我们研究结果的稳健性。
在这项MR研究和荟萃分析相结合的研究中,肥胖与便秘风险增加相关。MR分析证明了遗传易感性肥胖与便秘风险之间的因果关系。需要更多研究来调查肥胖与便秘风险之间的潜在相关性及相关机制。