| Literature DB >> 34903730 |
Min Zhang1, Jing Chen2, Zhiqun Yin3, Lanbing Wang4, Lihua Peng5.
Abstract
Observational studies suggested a bidirectional correlation between depression and metabolic syndrome (MetS) and its components. However, the causal associations between them remained unclear. We aimed to investigate whether genetically predicted depression is related to the risk of MetS and its components, and vice versa. We performed a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study using summary-level data from the most comprehensive genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of depression (n = 2,113,907), MetS (n = 291,107), waist circumference (n = 462,166), hypertension (n = 463,010) fasting blood glucose (FBG, n = 281,416), triglycerides (n = 441,016), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C, n = 403,943). The random-effects inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method was applied as the primary method. The results identified that genetically predicted depression was significantly positive associated with risk of MetS (OR: 1.224, 95% CI: 1.091-1.374, p = 5.58 × 10-4), waist circumference (OR: 1.083, 95% CI: 1.027-1.143, p = 0.003), hypertension (OR: 1.028, 95% CI: 1.016-1.039, p = 1.34 × 10-6) and triglycerides (OR: 1.111, 95% CI: 1.060-1.163, p = 9.35 × 10-6) while negative associated with HDL-C (OR: 0.932, 95% CI: 0.885-0.981, p = 0.007) but not FBG (OR: 1.010, 95% CI: 0.986-1.034, p = 1.34). No causal relationships were identified for MetS and its components on depression risk. The present MR analysis strength the evidence that depression is a risk factor for MetS and its components (waist circumference, hypertension, FBG, triglycerides, and HDL-C). Early diagnosis and prevention of depression are crucial in the management of MetS and its components.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34903730 PMCID: PMC8668963 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01759-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1Overview of the study design in this bidirectional MR study.
A We performed a total of 12 MR analyses to investigate the bidirectional association between depression and MetS and its components. B MR analysis depends on three key assumptions. C Sketch of the study design. MetS metabolic syndrome, FBG fasting blood glucose, TG triglycerides, WC waist circumference, HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
The R2 and F-statistics for the genetic instruments and the power for MR.
| Exposure | Outcome | No. SNP | Power | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Metabolic syndrome | 96 | 0.37% | 77.71 | 99.6% |
| Depression | Waist circumference | 89 | 0.33% | 78.75 | 90.9% |
| Depression | Hypertension | 89 | 0.32% | 77.19 | 90.4% |
| Depression | Fasting blood glucose | 96 | 0.32% | 77.99 | 73.2% |
| Depression | Triglycerides | 90 | 0.33% | 78.47 | 89.8% |
| Depression | HDL-C | 90 | 0.33% | 77.00 | 86.5% |
| The reverse MR analysis | |||||
| Metabolic syndrome | Depression | 73 | 2.34% | 88.13 | 99.9% |
| Waist circumference | Depression | 30 | 0.76% | 55.57 | 100.0% |
| Hypertension | Depression | 10 | 0.22% | 37.21 | 100.0% |
| Fasting blood glucose | Depression | 118 | 13.56% | 230.46 | 100.0% |
| Triglycerides | Depression | 26 | 2.84% | 196.14 | 100.0% |
| HDL-C | Depression | 60 | 3.32% | 107.75 | 100.0% |
HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
Genetic predicted depression on risk of MetS and its components in the MR analysis.
| Exposure | Outcome | No.SNP | Methods | OR (95% CI) | Egger_intercept | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | MetS | 96 | MR Egger | 1.136 (0.711–1.814) | 0.595 | 0.002 | 0.747 |
| IVW (Q = 271.41, | 1.224 (1.091–1.374) | 5.59 × 10−4 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.244 (1.099–1.407) | 5.22 × 10−4 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.410 (0.986–2.015) | 0.063 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.271 (0.880–1.836) | 0.204 | |||||
| Depression | Waist circumference | 89 | MR Egger | 1.074 (0.863–1.335) | 0.525 | 0.000 | 0.933 |
| IVW (Q = 691.11, | 1.083 (1.027–1.143) | 0.003 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.115 (1.071–1.161) | 1.15 × 10−7 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.181 (1.086–1.285) | 1.99 × 10−4 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.158 (1.067–1.256) | 7.06 × 10−4 | |||||
| Depression | Hypertension | 89 | MR Egger | 1.013 (0.968–1.059) | 0.587 | 0.000 | 0.507 |
| IVW (Q = 213.70, | 1.028 (1.016–1.039) | 1.34 × 10−6 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.032 (1.020–1.045) | 1.76 × 10−7 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.053 (1.020–1.086) | 0.002 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.052 (1.019–1.086) | 0.002 | |||||
| Depression | FBG | 96 | MR Egger | 1.015 (0.921–1.119) | 0.764 | −0.000 | 0.912 |
| IVW (Q = 146.38, | 1.010 (0.986–1.034) | 0.423 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.006 (0.977–1.036) | 0.697 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.022 (0.942–1.109) | 0.597 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.018 (0.946–1.095) | 0.634 | |||||
| Depression | Triglycerides | 90 | MR Egger | 1.168 (0.970–1.406) | 0.106 | −0.001 | 0.587 |
| IVW (Q = 413.96, | 1.111 (1.060–1.163) | 9.35 × 10−6 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.105 (1.061–1.151) | 1.78 × 10−6 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.059 (0.917–1.222) | 0.436 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.141 (0.991–1.314) | 0.07 | |||||
| Depression | HDL-C | 90 | MR Egger | 1.027 (0.837–1.261) | 0.796 | −0.002 | 0.337 |
| IVW (Q = 551.12, | 0.932 (0.885–0.981) | 0.007 | |||||
| Weighted median | 0.920 (0.881–0.960) | 1.37 × 10−4 | |||||
| Simple mode | 0.865 (0.766–0.977) | 0.022 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 0.911 (0.782–1.062) | 0.235 |
IVW inverse-variance weighted, MetS metabolic syndrome, FBG fasting blood glucose, HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
Fig. 2The scatter plots of the association between genetically predicted depression on MetS and its components.
MetS metabolic syndrome, FBG fasting blood glucose, TG triglycerides, WC waist circumference, HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
Genetic predicted MetS and its components on the risk of depression in the MR analysis.
| Exposure | Outcome | No.SNP | Methods | OR (95% CI) | Egger_intercept | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MetS | Depression | 73 | MR Egger | 1.022 (0.976–1.071) | 0.356 | −0.001 | 0.660 |
| IVW (Q = 173.68, | 1.013 (0.989–1.039) | 0.296 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.018 (0.993–1.044) | 0.157 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.018 (0.968–1.070) | 0.484 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.012 (0.987–1.039) | 0.350 | |||||
| Waist circumference | Depression | 30 | MR Egger | 0.713 (0.539–0.942) | 0.025 | 0.013 | 0.004 |
| IVW (Q = 68.78, | 1.099 (0.998–1.209) | 0.054 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.040 (0.949–1.139) | 0.402 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.062 (0.929–1.215) | 0.383 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.041 (0.927-–1.170) | 0.502 | |||||
| Hypertension | Depression | 10 | MR Egger | 0.868 (0.748–1.007) | 0.099 | 0.009 | 0.183 |
| IVW (Q = 7.02, | 0.966 (0.930–1.003) | 0.071 | |||||
| Weighted median | 0.948 (0.900–0.998) | 0.043 | |||||
| Simple mode | 0.939 (0.861–1.025) | 0.192 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 0.942 (0.873–1.017) | 0.162 | |||||
| FBG | Depression | 118 | MR Egger | 1.116 (1.034–1.204) | 0.006 | −0.003 | 0.006 |
| IVW (Q = 243.76, | 1.022 (0.976–1.070) | 0.354 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.052 (1.002–1.106) | 0.043 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.045 (0.962–1.136) | 0.300 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.061 (1.017–1.107) | 0.007 | |||||
| Triglycerides | Depression | 26 | MR Egger | 1.031 (0.977–1.087) | 0.281 | 0.000 | 0.784 |
| IVW (Q = 34.41, | 1.036 (0.999–1.075) | 0.059 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.027 (0.985–1.071) | 0.205 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.023 (0.939–1.115) | 0.605 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.028 (0.993–1.064) | 0.129 | |||||
| HDL-C | Depression | 60 | MR Egger | 0.994 (0.946–1.045) | 0.817 | 0.001 | 0.382 |
| IVW (Q = 106.44, | 1.011 (0.978–1.045) | 0.517 | |||||
| Weighted median | 1.010 (0.975–1.047) | 0.581 | |||||
| Simple mode | 1.031 (0.954–1.115) | 0.443 | |||||
| Weighted mode | 1.005 (0.972–1.039) | 0.778 |
IVW inverse-variance weighted, MetS metabolic syndrome, FBG fasting blood glucose, HDL-C high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.