作者
Hong Li,Juan Su,Mingfang Zhu,Yaqi Zhu,Shilin Zhu
摘要
Psoriasis is an immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease characterised by painful or itchy scaly erythematous plaques, and its clinical phenotypes include vulgaris, pustular, erythrodermic and arthropathic forms.Psoriasis is associated with many co-morbidities such as metabolic syndrome, diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). 1 Previous studies have reported a prevalence of 47% for NAFLD in patients with psoriasis. 2bservational studies have found that psoriasis is associated with NAFLD, 3 some GWAS studies have also found that NAFLD may not be a risk factor for psoriasis. 4However, the exact physiological mechanisms behind the observed results are unknown and may be related to the high prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome in this patient population. 1 In addition, the occurrence of NAFLD in patients with psoriasis may be related to the existence of a common pathogenesis for both diseases, which are both affected by the pro-inflammatory T-helper (Th)17 axis. 5herefore, the causal relationship between psoriasis and NAFLD is still unclear.Mendelian randomization (MR) is an approach using single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) instrumental variables (IVs) based on Genome-wide association studies (GWAS); it can effectively control the confounding bias and address gaps in observational.In MR studies, IVs were randomized and used as IVs of exposure to simulate real-world randomized controlled studies, thereby exploring the relationship between exposures and outcome variables. 6Therefore, we used two-sample MR to explore the causal relationship between psoriasis and NAFLD.GWAS data regarding psoriasis and NAFLD were obtained from a public website (https://gwas.mrcieu.ac.uk/).We conducted GWAS analyses (https://gwas.mrcieu.ac.uk/datasets/ukb-b-10537/) on 5314 patients with psoriasis and randomly selected 457,619 patients without psoriasis (ie, the control group) as well as on 894 patients with NAFLD and randomly selected 217,898 patients with alcoholic fatty liver (ie, the control group) (https://gwas.mrcieu.ac.uk/datasets/finn-b-NAFLD/).After releasing linkage disequilibrium, a total of 20 SNPs were included in our study as instrumental variables.The R software (version 4.0.4) and Two Sample MR (version 0.5.7) were used for the analyses.The two-sample MR analyses were conducted using inverse variance weighting method, and pleiotropy test was performed using the MR-Egger method.The unidirectionality and reliability of results were evaluated using reverse MR and leave-one-out method.For all the analyses, the significance threshold was set at P <0.05.The inverse variance weighting analysis (β IVW =8.98, P=0.01, Figure 1) and MR-Egger test (β=11.09,P=0.03) showed that the genetic risk of psoriasis was positively associated with the increase in the relative risk of NAFLD.However, bidirectional association evaluation showed that genetic predisposition of NAFLD did not increase the risk for psoriasis (P=0.70).To ensure that instrumental variables affect patients' outcome via risk factors only, we used the MR-Egger method for horizontal pleiotropy test, which indicated no significant pleiotropy in the IVW analysis (P=0.50).Finally, the leave-one-out sensitivity analysis was used to determine