| Literature DB >> 32698144 |
Jonathan M Fussey1, Robin N Beaumont2, Andrew R Wood2, Bijay Vaidya3, Joel Smith1, Jessica Tyrrell2.
Abstract
Evidence from observational studies suggest a positive association between serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels and differentiated thyroid carcinoma. However, the cause-effect relationship is poorly understood and these studies are susceptible to bias and confounding. This study aimed to investigate the causal role of TSH in both benign thyroid nodules and thyroid cancer in up to 451,025 UK Biobank participants, using a genetic technique, known as Mendelian randomization (MR). Hospital Episode Statistics and Cancer Registry databases were used to identify 462 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma and 2031 patients with benign nodular thyroid disease. MR methods using genetic variants associated with serum TSH were used to test causal relationships between TSH and the two disease outcomes. Mendelian randomization provided evidence of a causal link between TSH and both thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease. Two-sample MR suggested that a 1 s.d. higher genetically instrumented TSH (approximately 0.8 mIU/L) resulted in 4.96-fold higher odds of benign nodular disease (95% CI 2.46-9.99) and 2.00-fold higher odds of thyroid cancer (95% CI 1.09-3.70). Our results thus support a causal role for TSH in both benign nodular thyroid disease and thyroid cancer.Entities:
Keywords: mendelian randomization; molecular epidemiology; thyroid neoplasms; thyrotropin
Year: 2020 PMID: 32698144 PMCID: PMC7497356 DOI: 10.1530/ERC-20-0067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocr Relat Cancer ISSN: 1351-0088 Impact factor: 5.678
TSH SNPs, their effect sizes on TSH (modified from Porcu ) and their effect on thyroid-specific gene expression.
| Chromosome | Position | Effect/other allele | SNP | Effect size | Thyroid-specific gene expression | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 76566105 | A/G | rs6885099 | −0.141 | 0.009 | No |
| 6 | 165966473 | C/G | rs753760 | 0.100 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 1 | 19713761 | A/G | rs10799824 | −0.113 | 0.012 | Yes |
| 16 | 78306854 | T/C | rs3813582 | 0.082 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 6 | 43919740 | T/C | rs9472138 | −0.079 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 6 | 44012758 | T/C | rs11755845 | −0.065 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 4 | 149888956 | T/C | rs10032216 | 0.087 | 0.011 | Yes |
| 2 | 217333768 | A/G | rs13015993 | 0.078 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 17 | 67639131 | T/C | rs9915657 | −0.064 | 0.009 | Yes |
| 1 | 61393084 | A/G | rs334699 | −0.141 | 0.021 | No |
| 15 | 47533656 | A/T | rs10519227 | −0.072 | 0.011 | Yes |
| 11 | 45184143 | T/C | rs17723470 | −0.065 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 15 | 86920108 | A/G | rs17776563 | −0.060 | 0.010 | Yes |
| 19 | 7174848 | T/G | rs4804416 | −0.057 | 0.009 | No |
| 9 | 135129086 | A/C | rs657152 | 0.058 | 0.009 | No |
| 14 | 92665344 | A/C | rs11624776 | −0.064 | 0.011 | Yes |
| 8 | 32535816 | A/G | rs7825175 | −0.066 | 0.001 | Yes |
| 14 | 35643769 | T/C | rs1537424 | −0.052 | 0.009 | Yes |
| 6 | 148562985 | T/C | rs9497965 | 0.051 | 0.009 | No |
| 9 | 4257209 | A/G | rs1571583 | 0.057 | 0.010 | No |
Positions given are in build 36. Tissue-specific expression information from the Genotype-Tissue Expression Consortium (www.gtexportal.org).
Figure 1If a risk factor, for example, high TSH truly causes an outcome, for example, thyroid cancer, then the genetic variants for the risk factor should also be associated with the outcome. Unlike the observed risk factor, the genetic variants are not susceptible to confounding by other risk factors or reverse causation (dashed lines) as they are assigned at conception. Horizontal pleiotropy (dotted line), whereby the variants of interest also affect the outcome via their association with another trait is a possible limitation of MR.
Summary of demographic characteristics of participants.
| Characteristics | Benign nodular thyroid disease | Controls | Thyroid cancer | Cancer-free controls | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1812 | 377,896 | 425 | 310,176 | |||
| Female sex | 1492 (82.34) | 203,244 (53.78) | <1 × 10−15 | 316 (74.35) | 165,537 (53.37) | 5.6 × 10−17 |
| Mean age at recruitment ( | 58.92 (7.39) | 57.23 (8.01) | <1 × 10−15 | 57.72 (7.29) | 56.54 (8.04) | 0.0022 |
| Smoking status: | ||||||
| Never | 976 (53.86) | 203,242 (53.78) | 0.04 | 233 (54.82) | 169,785 (54.74) | 0.40 |
| Former | 649 (35.82) | 133,744 (35.40) | 152 (35.76) | 107,027 (34.51) | ||
| Current | 166 (9.16) | 35,774 (9.47) | 32 (7.53) | 29,261 (9.43) | ||
| Missing | 21 (1.16) | 5136 (1.36) | 8 (1.88) | 4103 (1.32) | ||
| Mean townsend deprivation index ( | −1.16 (3.09) | −1.48 (2.99) | 4.8 × 10−8 | −1.63 (2.94) | −1.45 (2.99) | 0.42 |
| Mean units of alcohol ( | 0.20 (1.07) | 0.57 (1.04) | 2.5 × 10−6 | 0.37 (1.00) | 0.57 (1.04) | 0.48 |
| Mean BMI ( | 27.96 (5.23) | 27.38 (4.78) | 4.1 × 10−12 | 27.55 (5.34) | 27.38 (4.77) | 0.16 |
| Obese: BMI 30–40 kg/m2 | 471 (25.99) | 83,503 (22.10) | 1.6 × 10−9 | 111 (26.12) | 68,563 (22.10) | 0.068 |
| Type 2 diabetes | 70 (3.86) | 11,996 (3.17) | 0.0037 | 16 (3.76) | 9290 (3.0) | 0.16 |
| Hypothyroidism | 182 (10.04) | 18,600 (4.92) | 4.8 × 10−9 | 28 (6.59) | 15,238 (4.91) | 0.12 |
| Hyperthyroidism | 59 (3.26) | 2897 (0.77) | 1.6 × 10−4 | 7 (1.65) | 2377 (0.77) | 0.35 |
Table represents data after exclusion of related individuals due to the difficulty in adjusting observational analyses for relatedness. Values stated are numbers (percentages), unless otherwise stated. P-values calculated using logistic regression adjusted for age and sex.
Figure 2Forest plot showing two sample MR (instrumental variable analysis) associations between genetically instrumented TSH and thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease. Odds ratios of outcome per s.d. higher genetically instrumented TSH and 95% CIs are shown.
Results of two-sample MR analysis for benign nodular thyroid disease and thyroid cancer.
| Trait | IVW | Egger | WM | PWM | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | Int | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |||||
| Thyroid cancer | 2.00 (1.09–3.70) | 0.039 | 1.71 (0.23–12.72) | 0.60 | 0.87 | 1.88 (1.04–3.39) | 0.037 | 1.50 (0.83–2.73) | 0.18 |
| Benign nodular thyroid disease | 4.96 (2.46–9.99) | 2.59 × 10−4 | 1.46 (0.16–13.43) | 0.74 | 0.27 | 3.84 (2.27–6.49) | 5.54 × 10−7 | 5.44 (2.90–10.21) | 1.37 × 10−7 |
Beta coefficients and P values for the inverse variant weighted (IVW), Egger, weighted median (WM) and penalised weighted median (PWM) analyses are displayed. Int P represents the P-intercept of Egger analysis, which is a measure of horizontal pleiotropy. s.e. are displayed in parentheses.
Figure 3Forest plot showing associations between genetically instrumented TSH and thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease. Odds ratios of outcome per s.d. higher genetically instrumented TSH and 95% CIs are shown.
Figure 4Forest plot showing associations between quartiles for TSH genetic risk and thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease. Odds ratios and 95% CIs are shown for each quartile as compared to those in the lowest quartile.
Results of sensitivity analysis for both thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease after exclusion of participants with co-existing diagnoses of hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism.
| Analysis | Exposure | OR thyroid cancer | 95% CI | OR Benign nodular thyroid disease | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary analysis | TSH | 1.05 | 425 (310,176) | 1.02–1.09 | 1.11 | 1812 (377,896) | 1.10–1.13 |
| Sensitivity analysis | TSH | 1.05 | 423 (309,526) | 1.02–1.09 | 1.13 | 1803 (377,110) | 1.11–1.14 |
Results of sensitivity analysis for both thyroid cancer and benign nodular thyroid disease according to sex.
| Analysis | Exposure | OR thyroid cancer | 95% CI | OR Benign nodular thyroid disease | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary analysis | TSH | 1.05 | 462 (391,458) | 1.02–1.09 | 1.11 | 1812 (377,896) | 1.10–1.13 |
| Male sex | TSH | 1.01 | 109 (144,639) | 0.94–1.08 | 1.12 | 320 (174,652) | 1.08–1.15 |
| Female sex | TSH | 1.07 | 316 (165,537) | 1.03–1.11 | 1.13 | 1492 (203,244) | 1.11–1.15 |