The causal relationship between anti-diabetic drugs and gastrointestinal disorders: a drug-targeted mendelian randomization study
Mingyan Ju, Tingting Deng, Xuemin Jia, Menglin Gong, Yuying Li, Fanjie Liu, Ying Yin

TL;DR
This study uses genetic data to explore how antidiabetic drugs affect gastrointestinal disorders, finding that sulfonylureas may help prevent some conditions but increase risk of gastric ulcers.
Contribution
The study introduces a drug-targeted Mendelian randomization approach to assess causal relationships between antidiabetic drugs and gastrointestinal disorders.
Findings
Sulfonylureas significantly reduce the risk of Crohn’s disease, GERD, and chronic gastritis.
Sulfonylureas increase the risk of gastric ulcer development.
No causal effects were found for other antidiabetic drugs like metformin or GLP-1 agonists on gastrointestinal disorders.
Abstract
The incidence of diabetic gastrointestinal diseases is increasing year by year. This study aimed to investigate the causal relationship between antidiabetic medications and gastrointestinal disorders, with the goal of reducing the incidence of diabetes-related gastrointestinal diseases and exploring the potential repurposing of antidiabetic drugs. We employed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (TSMR) design to investigate the causal association between antidiabetic medications and gastrointestinal disorders, including gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), gastric ulcer (GU), chronic gastritis, acute gastritis, Helicobacter pylori infection, gastric cancer (GC), functional dyspepsia (FD), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), ulcerative colitis (UC), Crohn’s disease (CD), diverticulosis, and colorectal cancer (CRC). To identify potential inhibitors of antidiabetic drug targets, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies · Renal and Vascular Pathologies · Renal and related cancers
