Causal Relationship Between Depression and Traumatic Brain Injury: A Two‐Sample Mendelian Randomization Analysis
Shiping Wang, Lei Pan, Binyang Wang, Qianwen Ruan, Ying Shi, Tong Sun, Xu Yang, Lei Zhang, Xiaohua Ke, Geng Li, Meihua Qiu, Chuanxiong Li

TL;DR
This study finds that depression increases the risk of traumatic brain injury and vice versa, using genetic data to support a bidirectional causal relationship.
Contribution
The study provides novel evidence of a bidirectional causal link between depression and TBI using Mendelian randomization.
Findings
Depression increases the risk of traumatic brain injury (OR = 1.137).
Traumatic brain injury increases the risk of depression (OR = 1.083).
Causal relationships were robust across multiple statistical models and sensitivity analyses.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and depression are major global health burdens, yet their bidirectional causal relationship remains unclear. To explore the causal relationship between depression and TBI, and to clarify whether depression is one of the potential risk factors for TBI and whether TBI is one of the pathogenic factors for depression. This bidirectional two‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis investigated causal relationships between depression (n = 170,756) and TBI (n = 3193) using genome‐wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics. Genetic instruments were selected as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) significantly associated with exposures (depression/TBI) and outcomes (TBI/depression) at genome‐wide significance (P < 5 × 10⁻⁶). The inverse variance weighted (IVW) method under fixed‐effects and multiplicative random‐effects models served as the primary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies
