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A Bidirectional Mendelian Randomization Study of Sarcopenia-Related Traits and Knee Osteoarthritis

Longyao Zhang, Chao Zhang, Juntao Zhang, Aifeng Liu, Ping Wang, Jiankang Xu

2023Clinical Interventions in Aging50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: With the development of population aging worldwide, sarcopenia and knee osteoarthritis (KOA), two age-related diseases, will continue to impose increasing medical and economic burdens on the society. Previous studies have discovered an association between the two, but the causality remains controversial, and it is difficult to eliminate confounding factors. Therefore, a Mendelian randomization (MR) study was conducted to overcome these confounding factors and investigate the causal relationship between sarcopenia and KOA. Objective: The present work focused on assessing the causality between KOA and sarcopenia, so as to provide new strategies to prevent and treat these two conditions in clinic. Methods: We registered the title with PROSPERO (ID: CRD42023421096). The two-sample bidirectional MR analysis was conducted in two steps, with sarcopenia being the exposure whereas KOA being the outcome in the first step, and vice versa in the second step. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data on low hand-grip strength (n=256,523), walking pace (n=459,915), appendicular lean mass (ALM, n=450,243), and KOA (n=403,124) were obtained from the UK Biobank. Methods such as the inverse variance weighted (IVW) and weighted median were utilized for assessing the causality of KOA with sarcopenia, and sensitivity analyses were also conducted. Results: In the main MR analysis using the IVW method, evidence suggested that low hand-grip strength, walking pace, and ALM had adverse effects on KOA (p-value 0.0001, odds ratio (OR) 1.4569, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2007-1.7677 for low hand-grip strength; p-value 0.0003, OR 1.1500, 95% CI 1.050-1.183 for ALM; p-value 5.29E-19, OR 0.0932, 95% CI 0.0553-0.1572 for walking pace). However, there was no causality of KOA with sarcopenia in the opposite direction. Conclusion: Our study suggests an obvious unidirectional causality of KOA with sarcopenia, and supports the notion that patients with sarcopenia are more susceptible to the development of KOA.

Topics & Concepts

Mendelian randomizationMedicineSarcopeniaConfoundingOdds ratioConfidence intervalGrip strengthGenome-wide association studyPopulationSample size determinationCausality (physics)Physical therapyInternal medicineEnvironmental healthSingle-nucleotide polymorphismStatisticsGeneticsGenotypeGeneQuantum mechanicsBiologyGenetic variantsMathematicsPhysicsNutrition and Health in AgingOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsMuscle Physiology and Disorders
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