The causal effect of metabolic syndrome and its components on benign prostatic hyperplasia: A univariable and multivariable Mendelian randomization study

Author:

Lv Kaikai12,Yang Guorong12,Wu Yangyang12,Xia Xinze3,Hao Xiaowei12,Pang Aibo2,Han Dong4,Yuan Qing12,Song Tao12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) General Hospital Beijing China

2. Medical School of Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Beijing China

3. Department of Urology Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan China

4. Department of Ultrasound Diagnosis, Daping Hospital Army Military Medical University Chongqing China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrevious observational studies have indicated that metabolic abnormalities are associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). The limitations of the research methodology of observational studies do not allow causal inference to be drawn; however, Mendelian randomization (MR) can clarify this.MethodsUsing summary‐level data from genome‐wide association studies, we conducted a two‐sample MR study to examine the causality of the metabolic syndrome (MetS) and its components on BPH (26,358 BPH cases and 110,070 controls). The random‐effects inverse‐variance weighted was employed as the primary method for MR analyses.ResultsWe observed that genetically predicted waist circumference (WC) (odds ratio [OR] = 1.236, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.034−1.478, p = 0.020) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (OR = 1.011, 95% CI: 1.002−1.020, p = 0.020) were significantly positively associated with BPH risk. We did not identify a causal effect of MetS (OR = 0.975, 95% CI: 0.922−1.031, p = 0.375), systolic blood pressure (OR = 1.004, 95% CI: 0.999−1.008, p = 0.115), triglycerides (OR = 1.016, 95% CI: 0.932−1.109, p = 0.712), high‐density lipoprotein (OR = 1.005, 95% CI: 0.930−1.086, p = 0.907), and fasting blood glucose (OR = 1.037, 95% CI: 0.874−1.322, p = 0.678) on BPH. In the multivariable MR analysis, we observed that the risk effect of DBP (OR = 1.013, 95% CI: 1.000−1.026, p = 0.047) on BPH persisted after conditioning with WC (OR = 1.132, 95% CI: 0.946−1.356, p = 0.177).ConclusionsOur study provides genetic evidence supporting the causal effect of DBP on BPH, although the effect of WC needs to be further validated.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology,Oncology

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