Risk of lower respiratory tract infections: a genome-wide association study with Mendelian randomization analysis in three independent European populations
Flatby, Helene Marie; Rasheed, Humaira; Ravi, Anuradha; Thomas, Laurent; Liyanarachi, Kristin Vardheim; Afset, Jan Egil; DeWan, Andrew; Brumpton, Ben Michael; Hveem, Kristian; Åsvold, Bjørn Olav; Simonsen, Gunnar Skov; Furberg, Anne-Sofie; Damås, Jan Kristian; Solligård, Erik; Rogne, Tormod
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3014851Utgivelsesdato
2021Metadata
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Originalversjon
10.1016/j.cmi.2021.11.004Sammendrag
Objective: Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Few studies have previously investigated the genetic susceptibility and potential risk factors for LRTI. Methods: We used data from UK Biobank, HUNT, and FinnGen, to conduct a genome-wide association study (GWAS). Cases were subjects hospitalized with LRTI, and controls were subjects with no such hospitalization. We conducted stratification and interaction analyses to evaluate if the genetic effect of LRTI differed by sex or smoking. Mendelian randomization [MR] analyses were conducted to identify the unconfounded relationship between cardiometabolic risk factors and LRTI. Results: A total of 25,320 cases and 575,294 controls were included. The 15q25.1 locus reached genome-wide significance in the meta-analysis (rs10519203: OR = 0.94, P = 3.87e-11). The protective effect of effect allele of rs10519203 was present among smokers (OR = 0.90 [95% CI = 0.87 - 0.92, P = 1.38e-15]) but not among never-smokers (OR = 1.01 [95% CI = 0.97 - 1.06, P = 5.20e-01]). In MR analyses, we found that increasing body mass index (OR = 1.31 [95% CI = 1.24 - 1.40, P = 3.78e-18]), lifetime smoking (OR = 2.83 [95% CI = 2.34 - 3.42, P = 6.56e-27]), and systolic blood pressure robustly increased the risk of LRTIs (OR = 1.11 [95% CI = 1.02 - 1.22, P = 1.48e-02]). Conclusion: A region in 15q25.1 was strongly associated with LRTI susceptibility. Reduction of the prevalence of smoking, overweight, obesity, and hypertension may reduce the disease burden of LRTIs. Keywords: body mass index, genome-wide association study, lowerrespiratory tract infection, mendelianrandomization, pneumonia, respiratory infection, smoking