Litcius/Paper detail

Obesity and head and neck cancer risk: a mendelian randomization study

Lin Gui, Xiaohui He, Le Tang, Jiarui Yao, Jinping Pi

2023BMC Medical Genomics24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Observational studies have reported controversial results on the association between obesity and head and neck cancer risk. This study aimed to perform a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to assess the causal association between obesity and head and neck cancer risk using publicly available genome-wide association studies (GWAS) summary statistics. METHODS: Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for obesity [body mass index (BMI), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), whole body fat mass, lean body mass, and trunk fat mass] and head and neck cancer (total head and neck cancer, oral cavity cancer, oropharyngeal cancer, and oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer) were retrieved from published GWASs and used as genetic instrumental variables. Five methods including inverse-variance-weighted (IVW), weighted-median, MR-Egger, weighted mode, and MR-PRESSO were used to obtain reliable results, and odds ratio with 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated. Tests for horizontal pleiotropy, heterogeneity, and sensitivity were performed separately. RESULTS: Genetically predicted BMI was negatively associated with the risk of total head and neck cancer, which was significant in the IVW [OR (95%CI), 0.990 (0.984-0.996), P = 0.0005], weighted-median [OR (95%CI), 0.984 (0.975-0.993), P = 0.0009], and MR-PRESSO [OR (95%CI), 0.990 (0.984-0.995), P = 0.0004] analyses, but suggestive significant in the MR-Egger [OR (95%CI), 0.9980 (0.9968-0.9991), P < 0.001] and weighted mode [OR (95%CI), 0.9980 (0.9968-0.9991), P < 0.001] analyses. Similar, genetically predicted BMI adjust for smoking may also be negatively associated with the risk of total head and neck cancer (P < 0.05). Genetically predicted BMI may be negatively related to the risk of oral cavity cancer, oropharyngeal cancer, and oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer (P < 0.05), but no causal association was observed for BMI adjust for smoking (P > 0.05). In addition, no causal associations were observed for other exposures and outcomes (all P > 0.05). CONCLUSION: This MR analysis supported the causal association of BMI-related obesity with decreased risk of total head and neck cancer. However, the effect estimates from the MR analysis were close to 1, suggesting a slight protective effect of BMI-related obesity on head and neck cancer risk.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMendelian randomizationInternal medicineBody mass indexConfidence intervalOdds ratioCancerObesityHead and neck cancerOncologySingle-nucleotide polymorphismGeneticsBiologyGenotypeGeneGenetic variantsGenetic Associations and EpidemiologyHead and Neck Cancer StudiesBRCA gene mutations in cancer