The causal association of smoking, alcohol intake, and coffee intake with the risk of bacterial pneumonia: A Mendelian randomization study.

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Zhendong He, Leting Zheng, Zhanrui Chen, Jing Wen, Fang Qin, Hanyou Mo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: At present, the association of smoking, alcohol intake, and coffee intake with the risk of bacterial pneumonia (BP) remains controversial. In this study, we used a 2-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to estimate the association of smoking, alcohol intake, and coffee intake with the risk of BP.

Methods: We extracted genetic variants associated with smoking initiation and cigarettes per day from the Genome-Wide Association Study and Sequencing Consortium of Alcohol and Nicotine Use database (944,625 individuals). We also extracted genetic variants associated with past tobacco smoking, alcohol intake frequency, and coffee intake from the UK Biobank database (1,316,166 individuals). BP outcomes were chosen from the FinnGen genome-wide association studies (GWAS) database (7987 patients and 188,868 controls). The inverse variance-weighted method was used primarily to calculate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Sensitivity analysis using different approaches such as weighted median, MR Egger, and MR pleiotropy residual sum and outlier (MR-PRESSO) have been implemented, as well as leave-one-out analysis to identify pleiotropy.

Results: The 2-sample MR analysis supported the causal association of genetically predicted cigarettes per day (OR: 1.23, 95% CI: [1.08-1.39], P < .01] and smoking initiation (OR: 1.22, 95% CI: [1.03-1.44], P = .02) with the risk of BP, but not past tobacco smoking, alcohol intake frequency, and coffee intake. Heterogeneity (P > .05) and pleiotropy (P > .05) tests provided confirmatory evidence for the validity of our MR estimates.

Conclusion: Our findings provide relevant evidence for a favorable causal association of genetically predicted smoking initiation and cigarettes per day with BP risk. However, there may not be a causal association between past tobacco smoking, alcohol intake, and coffee intake with increased BP incidence rates.

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来源期刊
Medicine
Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4342
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Medicine is now a fully open access journal, providing authors with a distinctive new service offering continuous publication of original research across a broad spectrum of medical scientific disciplines and sub-specialties. As an open access title, Medicine will continue to provide authors with an established, trusted platform for the publication of their work. To ensure the ongoing quality of Medicine’s content, the peer-review process will only accept content that is scientifically, technically and ethically sound, and in compliance with standard reporting guidelines.
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