Author:
Estiar Mehrdad A,Senkevich Konstantin,Yu Eric,Varghaei Parizad,Krohn Lynne,Bandres-Ciga Sara,Noyce Alastair J,Rouleau Guy A,Gan-Or Ziv
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEpidemiological studies have reported association between Parkinson’s disease (PD) and restless legs syndrome (RLS).ObjectivesWe aimed to use genetic data to study whether these two disorders are causally linked or share genetic architecture.MethodsWe performed two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) and linkage disequilibrium score regression (LDSC) using summary statistics from recent genome-wide meta-analyses of PD and RLS.ResultsWe found no evidence for a causal relationship between RLS (as the exposure) and PD (as the outcome, inverse variance-weighted; b=-0.003, se=0.031, p=0.916, F-statistic=217.5). Reverse MR also did not demonstrate any causal effect of PD on RLS (inverse variance-weighted; b=-0.012, se=0.023, p=0.592, F-statistic=191.7). LDSC analysis demonstrated lack of genetic correlation between RLS and PD (rg=-0.028, se=0.042, p=0.507).ConclusionsThere was no evidence for a causal relationship or genetic correlation between RLS and PD. The associations observed in epidemiological studies could be, in part, attributed to confounding or non-genetic determinants.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory