Evidence supported by Mendelian randomization: impact on inflammatory factors in knee osteoarthritis
Lilei Xu, Jiaqi Ma, Qing Yu, Kean Zhu, Xuewen Wu, Chuanlong Zhou, Xianming Lin

TL;DR
This study uses genetic data to identify proteins that protect against or increase the risk of knee osteoarthritis, offering new insights for potential treatments.
Contribution
The study identifies specific inflammatory proteins with causal links to knee osteoarthritis using Mendelian randomization.
Findings
Adenosine Deaminase (ADA), FGF5, and HFG are protective factors for KOA.
TNFα, CSF1, and TWEAK are risk factors for KOA.
The findings suggest potential targets for therapeutic interventions in KOA.
Abstract
Prior investigations have indicated associations between Knee Osteoarthritis (KOA) and certain inflammatory cytokines, such as the interleukin series and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα). To further elaborate on these findings, our investigation utilizes Mendelian randomization to explore the causal relationships between KOA and 91 inflammatory cytokines. This two-sample Mendelian randomization utilized genetic variations associated with KOA from a large, publicly accessible Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS), comprising 2,227 cases and 454,121 controls of European descent. The genetic data for inflammatory cytokines were obtained from a GWAS summary involving 14,824 individuals of European ancestry. Causal relationships between exposures and outcomes were primarily investigated using the inverse variance weighted method. To enhance the robustness of the research results, other…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsResearch in Social Sciences
