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Gout and the risk of Alzheimer′s disease: A Mendelian randomization study
Author(s) -
Lee Young Ho
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of rheumatic diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.795
H-Index - 41
eISSN - 1756-185X
pISSN - 1756-1841
DOI - 10.1111/1756-185x.13548
Subject(s) - mendelian randomization , medicine , gout , disease , alzheimer's disease , randomization , bioinformatics , clinical trial , genetics , gene , genotype , genetic variants , biology
Objective This study aimed to examine whether gout is causally associated with Alzheimer's disease. Methods I used the publicly available summary statistics datasets of three genome‐wide association studies (GWASs) on gout as the exposure dataset and meta‐analysis results of four GWAS datasets consisting of 17 008 cases with Alzheimer's disease and 37 154 controls of European descent as the outcome dataset. The data were subjected to 2‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis using the inverse‐variance weighted (IVW), weighted median, and MR‐Egger regression methods. Results I selected seven independent single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from gout GWASs as instrumental variables (IVs) to improve inference. These SNPs were located at MAP3K11 (rs10791821), SLC2A9 (rs11722228, rs734553), GCKR (rs1260326), ABCG2 (rs2231142, rs2728125), and CNIH‐2 (rs4073582). The IVW data did not support a causal association between gout and Alzheimer's disease ( β  = 0.013, standard error [SE] = 0.017, P  = 0.445). The MR‐Egger regression indicated that directional pleiotropy did not bias the result (intercept = 0.002, P  = 0.654); it also revealed no causal association between gout and Alzheimer's disease ( β  = −0.013, SE = 0.076, P  = 0.870). The weighted median approach yielded similar results ( β  = 0.004, SE = 0.022, P  = 0.846). Cochran's Q test indicated no evidence of heterogeneity between IV estimates based on individual variants, and the results of “leave‐one‐out” analysis demonstrated that no single SNP drove the IVW estimate. Conclusions The MR analysis results did not support a causal association between gout and Alzheimer's disease.

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