Association of blood lipid profiles and asthma: A bidirectional two‐sample Mendelian randomization study

Author:

Liu Yi‐Shian1ORCID,Lin Yu‐Chun1,Lin Meng‐Chih2,Wu Chao‐Chien2,Wang Tsu‐Nai13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health, College of Health Science Kaohsiung Medical University Kaohsiung Taiwan

2. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine Chang Gung Memorial Hospital‐Kaohsiung Medical Center, Chang Gung University College of Medicine Kaohsiung Taiwan

3. Research Center for Environmental Medicine Kaohsiung Medical University Kaohsiung Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundObservational studies and meta‐analyses have indicated associations between blood lipid profiles and asthma. However, the causal association is unknown. Therefore, this study investigated the causal relationship between blood lipid profiles and asthma using bidirectional Mendelian randomization analysis.Methods and materialsOur analyses were performed using individual data from the Taiwan Biobank and summary statistics from the Asian Genetic Epidemiology Network (AGEN). The causal estimates between all genetic variants, exposures of interest and asthma were calculated using an inverse‐variance weighted method based on Taiwan Biobank data from 24,853 participants (mean age, 48.8 years; 49.8% women). Sensitivity analyses, including the weighted median, MR Egger regression, MR‐PRESSO, mode‐based estimate, contamination mixture methods, and leave‐one‐out analysis, were applied to validate the results and detect pleiotropy.ResultsIn the inverse‐variance weighted (IVW) analyses, we found evidence of a significant causal effect of an increased level of low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol on asthma risk (βIVW = 1.338, p = 0.001). A genetically decreased level of high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol was also associated with asthma risk (βIVW = −0.338, p = 0.01). We also found that an increased level of total cholesterol was associated with an increased risk of asthma (βIVW = 1.343, p = 0.001). Several sensitivity analyses generated consistent findings. We did not find evidence to support the causality between asthma and blood lipid profiles in either direction.ConclusionOur results supported the causal relationship between higher levels of LDL cholesterol and total cholesterol and lower levels of HDL cholesterol with an increased risk of asthma.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference44 articles.

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