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Cited 7 time in webofscience Cited 8 time in scopus
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Alcohol intake and risk of rheumatoid arthritis: a Mendelian randomization study

Authors
Bae, S. -C.Lee, Y. H.
Issue Date
Oct-2019
Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
Keywords
Alcohol intake; Rheumatoid arthritis; Mendelian randomization; Genetic predisposition to disease; Genome-wide association study
Citation
ZEITSCHRIFT FUR RHEUMATOLOGIE, v.78, no.8, pp.791 - 796
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ZEITSCHRIFT FUR RHEUMATOLOGIE
Volume
78
Number
8
Start Page
791
End Page
796
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/12460
DOI
10.1007/s00393-018-0537-z
ISSN
0340-1855
Abstract
Objective. To examine whether alcohol intake is causally associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods. We performed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis using the inverse-variance weighted (IVW), weighted median, and MR-Egger regression methods. We used the publicly available summary statistics of alcohol intake frequency from the UK Biobank genome-wide association studies (GWASs; n = 336,965) as the exposure and a GWAS meta-analysis of 5539 autoantibody-positive RA patients and 20,169 controls as the outcome. Results. We selected 24 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with alcohol intake frequency at genome-wide significance as instrumental variables (IVs) to improve inference, 16 of which were inversely associated with RA. The IVW method showed no evidence of a causal association between alcohol intake and RA (beta = 0.218, SE = 0.213, p = 0.306). The MR-Egger regression revealed that directional pleiotropy was unlikely to bias the result (intercept = 0.027, p = 0.292). The MR-Egger analysis and the weighted median approach showed no causal association between alcohol intake and RA (beta = -0.778, SE = 0.947, p = 0.420 and beta = -0.286, SE = 0.302, p = 0.344, respectively). Cochran's Q test did not indicate heterogeneity between IV estimates based on the individual variants, and results from a "leave-one-out" analysis demonstrated that no single SNP was driving the IVW point estimate. Conclusion. The MR analysis does not support a causal inverse association between alcohol intake and RA occurrence.
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