4.2 Article

Osteoporosis and osteoarthritis: a bi-directional Mendelian randomization study

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ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
卷 25, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-023-03213-5

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Osteoporosis; Osteoarthritis; Mendelian randomization; Gene ontology enrichment analyses; Expression quantitative trait locus analyses

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Using Mendelian randomization (MR) design, this study investigated the causal relationship between low bone mineral density (BMD) and osteoarthritis (OA). The findings suggest that low BMD may increase the risk of OA, and measures to raise BMD could be effective in preventing OA.
ObjectiveTo investigate the causal relationship between low bone mineral density (BMD) and osteoarthritis (OA) using Mendelian randomization (MR) design.MethodsTwo-sample bi-directional MR analyses were performed using summary-level information on OA traits from UK Biobank and arcOGEN. Sensitivity analyses including MR-Egger, simple median, weighted median, MR pleiotropy residual sum, and outlier approaches were utilized in conjunction with inverse variance weighting (IVW). Gene ontology (GO) enrichment analyses and expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) colocalization analyses were used to investigate the potential mechanism and shared genes between osteoporosis (OP) and OA.ResultsThe IVW method revealed that genetically predicted low femoral neck BMD was significantly linked with hip (beta = 0.105, 95% CI: 0.023-0.188) and knee OA (beta = 0.117, 95% CI: 0.049-0.184), but not with other site-specific OA. Genetically predicted low lumber spine BMD was significantly associated with OA at any sites (beta = 0.048, 95% CI: 0.011-0.085), knee OA (beta = 0.101, 95% CI: 0.045-0.156), and hip OA (beta = 0.150, 95% CI: 0.077-0.224). Only hip OA was significantly linked with genetically predicted reduced total bone BMD (beta = 0.092, 95% CI: 0.010-0.174). In the reverse MR analyses, no evidence for a causal effect of OA on BMD was found. GO enrichment analysis and eQTL analysis illustrated that DDN and SMAD-3 were the most prominent co-located genes.ConclusionsThese findings suggested that OP may be causally linked to an increased risk of OA, indicating that measures to raise BMD may be effective in preventing OA. More research is required to determine the underlying processes via which OP causes OA.

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