Bidirectional casual effects between periodontitis and Sj?gren's syndrome:a Mendelian randomization study
10.12016/j.issn.2096-1456.2024.03.007
- VernacularTitle:牙周炎与干燥综合征的因果关系:一项孟德尔随机化研究
- Author:
Peili XIE
1
;
Chenmiao GUO
;
Ting YU
Author Information
1. 广州医科大学口腔医学院·附属口腔医院·广东省口腔组织修复与重建工程技术研究中心·广州市口腔再生医学基础与应用研究重点实验室,广东 广州(510182)
- Keywords:
periodontitis;
Sj?gren's syndrome;
Mendelian randomization;
genome-wide association study;
causal association;
bidirectional casual association;
confounder;
inverse variance-weighted
- From:
Journal of Prevention and Treatment for Stomatological Diseases
2024;(3):209-215
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective To evaluate the bidirectional association between periodontitis and Sj?gren's syndrome us-ing the Mendelian randomization(MR)method.Methods Genome-wide association study(GWAS)data of periodonti-tis(N=45 563)and Sj?gren's syndrome(N=214 435)were selected to meet the requirements of the same ethnicity and different regions.Inverse variance-weighted(IVW),MR-Egger,and weighted median(WM)tests were used to evalu-ate the causal effect.Cochran's Q statistics,MR-Egger intercept,MR-PRESSO and leave-one-out analysis were used as sensitivity analyses to assess the stability and reliability of the results.Results After screening,the GWAS data of Sj?gren's syndrome were based on the Finnish region,and the periodontitis GWAS data were based on the UK region,both of which originated from European ancestry.Using IVW(OR=1.017,95%CI=0.956-1.082),MR-Egger(OR=0.985,95%CI=0.956-1.082),and WM(OR=1.021,95%CI=0.948-1.099),no causal effect of Sj?gren's syndrome on periodontitis was found using any of the three methods.Conversely,no causal effect of periodontitis on Sj?gren s syn-drome was found(IVW,OR=1.024,95%CI=0.852-1.230;MR-Egger,OR=0.978,95%CI=0.789-1.212;WM,OR=1.024,95%CI=0.846-1.260).The sensitivity analyses indicated that the results were stable and reliable.Cochran's Q test and MR-PRESSO revealed that there was no significant heterogeneity among the instrumental variables,which included single nucleotide polymorphisms(SNPs).The intercept of MR-Egger regression indicated no pleiotropy in the included SNPs.No individual SNP was found that significantly affected the results using the leave-one-out method.Conclusion This study does not support a bidirectional causal effect between periodontitis and Sj?gren's syndrome.