Exploring the Impact of Neuroticism on Lung Cancer Risk: Insights From Mediated Mendelian Randomization
Jie Zhang, Xiao Ma, Zhiyu Liu, He Wang, Binbin Lu, Zhaoxia Wang

TL;DR
This study finds that neuroticism may increase lung cancer risk, especially in men, with education playing a mediating role.
Contribution
The study provides causal evidence linking neuroticism to lung cancer risk using Mendelian randomization and identifies education as a mediator.
Findings
Neuroticism is associated with a 17% increased lung cancer risk in the general population.
Educational attainment mediates approximately 17% of the effect of neuroticism on lung cancer risk.
The risk increase is more significant in women compared to men.
Abstract
This study aimed to explore the potential association between neuroticism and lung cancer. We conducted analyses on publicly accessible aggregated data from genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) that included individuals of European descent. The objective was to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) significantly associated with neuroticism and utilize them as instrumental variables in a two‐sample Mendelian randomization framework to evaluate the gender‐specific causal link between neuroticism and lung cancer risk. We applied four statistical methods: Inverse variance weighting (IVW), weighted median, MR‐Egger regression, and weighted mode. Our analysis also considered the mediating effect of educational attainment on this relationship. We selected 67 SNPs associated with neuroticism at genome‐wide significance levels from GWAS datasets. Our primary findings using IVW…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic Associations and Epidemiology · Epigenetics and DNA Methylation · Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research
