| Literature DB >> 32571398 |
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a multifactorial chronic autoimmune disease, which involves a complex interplay of environmental triggers and genetic components in its etiology. It has been shown that genetics only explain about half of the liability to develop RA, leaving a large room for non-genetic factors. Indeed, several environmental exposures including smoking, drinking, obesity, and dietary patterns (and more) have been identified to be associated with RA risk, yet the observational nature of conventional epidemiological investigation hampers causal inference, as the validity of results could be plagued by measurement error, confounding, and/or reverse causality. Mendelian randomization (MR) is a novel statistical approach that uses genetic variants as instrumental variables (IV) to make causal inferences from observational data. The current genetic discoveries in the many heritable and modifiable human complex traits have provided an exceptional opportunity to evaluate a putative causal relationship between exposure and outcome in the absence of high-quality experimental or intervention studies, through a MR design. In the current review, we detail the contribution of MR studies hitherto conducted for modifiable environmental exposures with the risk of RA to understand the role of these factors in RA pathogenesis. We start with a brief introduction of each study, follow by a summarization of shortcomings and conclude by highlighting future directions. The application of MR design in the field of rheumatology remains limited. Only a few MR studies have examined the causal roles of vitamin D, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, coffee consumption, and levels of education in RA, where, no consistent evidence for a causal relationship has been found. Most studies lacked sensitivity analyses to verify MR model assumptions and to guarantee the validity of results. Almost all studies are likely to bias the strength of association towards a null value, since they used IVs from earlier GWAS(s) of exposures with a small sample size (i.e., few genetic markers). As the magnitudes of GWAS expand rapidly, additional trait-associated loci have been discovered. Incorporating these loci would greatly improve the strength of genetic instruments, as well as both the accuracy and precision of MR estimates. To conclude, there is a need for an update and a huge space for improvement of future MR studies in RA.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic instruments; Mendelian randomization; Modifiable environmental exposures; Rheumatoid arthritis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32571398 PMCID: PMC7310443 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-020-02253-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Fig. 1The conceptual framework of Mendelian Randomization. Mendelian randomization study uses genetic information (SNPs, instruments, IVs) as proxy for exposure to understand a causal inference between an exposure and an outcome. An un-confounded causal estimation can be made based on the observed IV-exposure and IV-outcome associations under certain assumptions. Namely, the selected IVs are associated with the exposure (red solid arrow), but not associated with any confounder of the exposure-outcome relationship (gray dash arrow), nor associated with the outcome via pathways other than through the exposure (gray dash arrow)
Characteristics of the current Mendelian randomization studies conducted for modifiable environmental exposures and RA
| Author | Year | Exposure | Outcome | Results | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trait | Genetic data | Ancestry | #IV | Trait | Genetic data | Ancestry | |||
| Bae and Lee | 2018 | Vitamin D | Summary statistics from two vitamin D GWAS. One consisted of 3538 individuals with replication in an additional 2151 individuals. The other consisted of 4501 persons from five cohorts. | Asian Indian + European | 3 | RA onset | Meta-GWAS of 5539 autoantibody-positive RA and 20,169 controls with replication in an independent set of 6768 RA and 8806 controls | European | No significant associations |
| Viatte et al. | 2014 | Vitamin D | SNPs in four vitamin D metabolism genes (GC, DHCR7/NADSYN1, CYP2R1 and CYP24A1) associated at genome-wide significance with circulating vitamin D levels. | European | 20 | RA radiological outcome | 1433 patients with 2164 X-rays from the Norfolk Arthritis Register (NOAR) and in 443 RA patients with 2924 X-rays from the Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Study (ERAS) | European | No significant associations |
| Yarwood et al. | 2013 | Vitamin D | SNPs in three vitamin D metabolism genes (GC, DHCR7/NADSYN1, and CYP2R1) associated at genome-wide significance with circulating vitamin D levels. | European | 6 | RA treatment response | 1396 RA patients from the Biologics in Rheumatoid Arthritis Genetics and Genomics Study Syndicate (BRAGGSS) | European | No significant associations |
| Bae and Lee | 2018 | Body mass index | Meta-GWAS for BMI in 322,154 individuals from the GIANT consortium. | European | 68 | RA onset | UK Biobank GWAS of 337,159 individuals (7480 RA cases and 329,679 controls) | European | Both IVW and median based methods showed evidence to support a causal association between BMI and RA |
| Qian et al. | 2020 | Smoking | The IV and the genetic association estimates for smoking initiation and lifetime smoking were obtained from a GWAS metaanalysis including 1,232,091 individuals and a GWAS of 462,690 individuals. | European | 367, 124 | RA onset | GWAS including 14,361 RA cases and 43,923 controls | European | Genetic predisposition to smoking initiation and lifetime smoking significantly increased RA risk |
| Bae and Lee | 2019 | Alcohol consumption | GWAS for alcohol intake frequency (increase) from 336,965 individuals included in the UK Biobank. | European | 24 | RA onset | Meta-GWAS of 5539 autoantibody-positive RA and 20,169 controls with replication in an independent set of 6768 RA and 8806 controls | European | No significant associations |
| Bae and Lee | 2018 | Coffee consumption | Summary data of meta-GWAS on coffee intake from 8 Caucasian cohorts ( | European | 4 | RA onset | Meta-GWAS of 5539 autoantibody-positive RA and 20,169 controls with replication in an independent set of 6768 RA and 8806 controls | European | Genetic predisposition to coffee consumption significantly increased RA risk |
| Yuan et al. | 2020 | Iron | A large GWAS of 48,972 individuals, four measures, serum iron, serum transferrin saturation, ferritin, and transferrin. | European | 5, 5, 6, 8 | RA onset | Large-scale meta-analysis of over 20 GWASs including 14,361 RA cases and 43,923 controls | European | Consistent across four iron biomarkers, genetically high iron status was inversely associated with RA |
| Cheng et al. | 2019 | Mineral nutrients | Ca-related genetic variation was derived from 17 population-based GWAS ( | Mixed population | 8, 5, 14, 2, 3 | RA onset | Meta-GWAS for 10 million RA-related SNPs were evaluated in a total of > 100,000 subjects of European and Asian ancestry (29,880 RA casesand 73,758 controls) | Asian and European | No consistent significant results between mineral nutrients and RA |
| Zhao et al. | 2018 | PUFA | Strong, independent genetic predictors of linoleic acid using the three most significant uncorrelated SNPs and seven uncorrelated SNPs in genes (FADS1, FADS2, and NTAN1) relevant to PUFA metabolism from a GWAS in 8631 adults. | European | 10 | RA onset | GWAS including 14,361 RA cases and 43,923 controls | European | Genetically instrumented LA was inversely associated with RA |
| Inamo | 2019 | Gut microbiome | GWASs for gut microbiome (totally 3326 individuals) | European | 26 | RA onset | GWAS including 14,361 RA cases and 43,923 controls | European | No significant associations |
| Bae and Lee | 2018 | Education | A UK Biobank GWAS ( | European | 49 | RA onset | Meta-GWAS of 5539 autoantibody-positive RA and 20,169 controls with replication in an independent set of 6768 RA and 8806 controls | European | The IVW method instructed an inverse causative relationship between years of education and RA |
Current progress in genetic discoveries for some of the modifiable environmental risk factors
| Traits | Author | Measures | Ancestry | Year | # Individuals | # IVs | Variance explained by genome-wide SNPs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smoking | Liu et al. | Smoking initiation (ever vs. never smoking) | European | 2019 | 1,232,091 | 378 | 8.0% |
| Smoking | Liu et al. | Cigarette per day | European | 2019 | 337,334 | 55 | 7.8% |
| Smoking | Liu et al. | Smoking cessation | European | 2019 | 547,219 | 24 | 4.6% |
| Alcohol consumption | Liu et al. | Drinks per week | European | 2019 | 941,280 | 99 | 4.2% |
| Physical activity | Doherty et al. | Accelerometer-measured overall physical activity | European | 2018 | 91,105 | 14 | 15% |
| Physical activity | Klimentidis et al. | Self-reported habitual physical activity | European | 2018 | 337,234 | 8 | 5% |
| Body mass index | Pulit et al. | Body mass index | European | 2018 | 694,649 | 941 | 22.4% |
| Vitamin D | Revez et al. | Circulating vitamin D levels | European | 2019 | 417,580 | 143 | 13% |
| Vitamin D | Manousaki et al. | Circulating vitamin D levels | European | 2020 | 401,460 | 138 | 4.9% |
| Educational attainment | Lee et al. | Number of years of schooling | European | 2018 | 1,131,881 | 1271 | 12.2% |
| Depression | Howard et al. | Major depression disorder | European | 2019 | 807,553 | 102 | 8.9% |
| Mood change | Ward et al. | Mood instability | European | 2019 | 363,705 | 46 | 9.0% |