Association between Dietary Habits and Pancreatitis among Individuals of European Ancestry: A Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study

Author:

Mao Xiaotong12ORCID,Huang Chunyou12,Wang Yuanchen1,Mao Shenghan1,Li Zhaoshen1,Zou Wenbin2,Liao Zhuan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Gastroenterology, Changhai Hospital, Navy Medical University, Shanghai 200433, China

2. Shanghai Institute of Pancreatic Diseases, Shanghai 200433, China

Abstract

Dietary factors are believed to potentially influence the risk of pancreatitis. Here, we systematically investigated the causal relationships between dietary habits and pancreatitis by using two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR). Large-scale genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics for dietary habits were obtained from the UK Biobank. GWAS data for acute pancreatitis (AP), chronic pancreatitis (CP), alcohol-induced AP (AAP) and alcohol-induced CP (ACP) were from the FinnGen consortium. We performed univariable and multivariable MR analyses to evaluate the causal association between dietary habits and pancreatitis. Genetically driven alcohol drinking was associated with increased odds of AP, CP, AAP and ACP (all with p < 0.05). Genetic predisposition to higher dried fruit intake was associated with reduced risk of AP (OR = 0.280, p = 1.909 × 10−5) and CP (OR = 0.361, p = 0.009), while genetic predisposition to fresh fruit intake was associated with reduced risk of AP (OR = 0.448, p = 0.034) and ACP (OR = 0.262, p = 0.045). Genetically predicted higher consumption of pork (OR = 5.618, p = 0.022) or processed meat (OR = 2.771, p = 0.007) had a significant causal association with AP, and genetically predicted higher processed meat intake increased the risk of CP (OR = 2.463, p = 0.043). Our MR study showed that fruit intake may be protective against pancreatitis, whereas dietary intake of processed meat has potential adverse impacts. These findings may inform prevention strategies and interventions directed toward dietary habits and pancreatitis.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

the Scientific Innovation Program of Shanghai Municipal Education Committee

the “Clinical Technology Innovation Project Task (Contract)” of Shanghai Shenkang Hospital Development Center

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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