Causal association of obesity and chronic pain mediated by educational attainment and smoking: a mediation Mendelian randomization study
- Author:
Yunshu LYU
1
;
Qingxing LU
;
Yane LIU
;
Mengtong XIE
;
Lintong JIANG
;
Junnan LI
;
Ning WANG
;
Xianglong DAI
;
Yuqi YANG
;
Peiming JIANG
;
Qiong YU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Clinical Research Article
- From:The Korean Journal of Pain 2025;38(2):177-186
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Background:Obesity and chronic pain are related in both directions, according to earlier observational research.This research aimed to analyze the causal association between obesity and chronic pain at the genetic level, as well as to assess whether common factors mediate this relationship.
Methods:This study used bidirectional two sample Mendelian randomization (MR) technique to analyze the association between obesity and chronic pain. Obesity's summary genome-wide association data were obtained from European ancestry groups, as measured by body mass index (BMI), waist-to-hip ratio, waist circumference (WC), and hip circumference (HC), genome-wide association study data for chronic pain also came from the UK population, including chronic pain at three different sites (back, hip, and headache), chronic widespread pain (CWP), and multisite chronic pain (MCP). Secondly, a two-step MR and multivariate MR investigation was performed to evaluate the mediating effects of several proposed confounders.
Results:The authors discovered a link between chronic pain and obesity. More specifically, a sensitivity analysis was done to confirm the associations between greater BMI, WC, and HC with an increased risk of CWP and MCP.Importantly, the intermediate MR results suggest that education levels and smoking initiation may mediate the causal relationship between BMI on CWP, with a mediation effect of 23.08% and 15.38%, respectively.
Conclusions:The authors’ findings demonstrate that the importance of education and smoking in understanding chronic pain’s pathogenesis, which is important for the primary prevention and prognosis of chronic pain.