TY - JOUR
T1 - A causal relationship between distinct immune features and acute or chronic pancreatitis
T2 - results from a mendelian randomization analysis
AU - Liu, Rujuan
AU - Wang, Kui
AU - Guo, Xiaoyu
AU - Wang, Qiqi
AU - Zhang, Xiuli
AU - Peng, Kaixin
AU - Lu, Wanyi
AU - Chen, Zhigao
AU - Cao, Feng
AU - Wang, Zheng
AU - Wen, Li
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 IAP and EPC
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Objectives: This study aimed to thoroughly examining the causal link between immune traits and four types of pancreatitis, using mendelian randomization. Methods: Data on 731 immune traits were collected from the genome-wide association study (GWAS) database as exposure. Information regarding acute pancreatitis (AP), alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis (AAP), chronic pancreatitis (CP), and alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis (ACP) were acquired from the FinnGen Consortium as outcomes. Mendelian randomization (MR) using inverse variance weighting (IVW) evaluated the links between immune traits and pancreatitis. We evaluated the robustness of the IVW results through sensitivity analyses and validated them using meta-analysis with AP and CP data from the UK Biobank in the GWAS catalog. Results: A total of 36 immune traits showed significant associations with susceptibility of four types of pancreatitis, including AP (7 traits), AAP (8 traits), CP (14 traits), and ACP (7 traits). Twenty characteristics were found to be potential risk factors for pancreatitis, identified in B Cells (5 traits), conventional dendritic cells (cDCs, 2 traits), maturation stage of T cells (2 traits), monocytes (2 traits), myeloid cells (2 traits), T cells, B cells, natural killer cells (TBNK, 2 traits), and regulatory T cells (Treg cells, 5 traits). Multiple sensitivity analyses confirmed the validity of the findings. Meta-analysis confirmed a solid causal relationship between CX3CR1 on CD14− CD16−of monocyte panel and the susceptibility of CP. Conclusions: Our MR study identified immune traits causally linked to acute and chronic pancreatitis, offering new insights for early clinical intervention and immune cell-targeted therapies.
AB - Objectives: This study aimed to thoroughly examining the causal link between immune traits and four types of pancreatitis, using mendelian randomization. Methods: Data on 731 immune traits were collected from the genome-wide association study (GWAS) database as exposure. Information regarding acute pancreatitis (AP), alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis (AAP), chronic pancreatitis (CP), and alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis (ACP) were acquired from the FinnGen Consortium as outcomes. Mendelian randomization (MR) using inverse variance weighting (IVW) evaluated the links between immune traits and pancreatitis. We evaluated the robustness of the IVW results through sensitivity analyses and validated them using meta-analysis with AP and CP data from the UK Biobank in the GWAS catalog. Results: A total of 36 immune traits showed significant associations with susceptibility of four types of pancreatitis, including AP (7 traits), AAP (8 traits), CP (14 traits), and ACP (7 traits). Twenty characteristics were found to be potential risk factors for pancreatitis, identified in B Cells (5 traits), conventional dendritic cells (cDCs, 2 traits), maturation stage of T cells (2 traits), monocytes (2 traits), myeloid cells (2 traits), T cells, B cells, natural killer cells (TBNK, 2 traits), and regulatory T cells (Treg cells, 5 traits). Multiple sensitivity analyses confirmed the validity of the findings. Meta-analysis confirmed a solid causal relationship between CX3CR1 on CD14− CD16−of monocyte panel and the susceptibility of CP. Conclusions: Our MR study identified immune traits causally linked to acute and chronic pancreatitis, offering new insights for early clinical intervention and immune cell-targeted therapies.
KW - Causal association
KW - Genome-wide association study
KW - Immune traits
KW - Mendelian randomization
KW - pancreatitis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85206685836
U2 - 10.1016/j.pan.2024.10.006
DO - 10.1016/j.pan.2024.10.006
M3 - 文章
C2 - 39419750
AN - SCOPUS:85206685836
SN - 1424-3903
VL - 24
SP - 1219
EP - 1228
JO - Pancreatology
JF - Pancreatology
IS - 8
ER -