通过孟德尔随机研究探索白细胞介素-6受体阻断剂在癫痫和相关神经精神疾病中的作用。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Yan-Mei Yu, Gui-Hong Jin, Chong Zhong, Hao Qian, Lei Wang, Feng Zhan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:炎症、免疫调节失调与包括癫痫在内的神经系统疾病发病之间的相互作用已被越来越多的人所认识。白细胞介素(IL)-6 是一种促炎症细胞因子,人们怀疑它不仅介导传统的炎症途径,而且还有助于神经炎症反应,而神经炎症反应可能是癫痫患者神经精神症状和更广泛的精神障碍的基础。IL-6受体(IL6R)阻断的作用是一个令人感兴趣的治疗干预目标,因为它有可能减弱这些过程。目的:探索IL6R阻断在降低癫痫风险方面的潜力,并研究这一途径是否也会影响神经炎症导致的相关精神和神经精神疾病:方法:利用IL6R基因附近的单核苷酸多态性(SNPs)进行孟德尔随机化(MR)分析(个体总数=408225),评估IL6R阻断与癫痫(病例/对照组总数=12891/312803)、局灶性癫痫(病例/对照组总数=7526/399290)和全身性癫痫(病例/对照组总数=1413/399287)之间的假定因果关系。SNP权重根据其对C反应蛋白(CRP)水平的影响确定,并使用反方差加权荟萃分析法进行整合,作为IL6R效应的替代物。为了解决潜在的离群和多效应影响问题,在不同的建模假设下采用了多种 MR 方法进行了敏感性分析:结果:以 IL6R 阻断为目标的遗传模拟显示,总体癫痫风险略有降低,但幅度很大[逆方差加权:比值比 (OR):0.827;95% 置信区间 (CI):0.685-1.000;P = 0.05]。亚型分析显示出差异性,在全身性、局灶性或特殊的儿童和青少年癫痫中均未观察到显著影响。除了主要的炎症标志物 CRP 外,研究结果还表明,IL-6 信号介导的潜在非炎症途径对癫痫的神经生物学特征有影响,暗示了神经炎症、精神症状和相关精神障碍之间可能存在联系:调查强调了IL6R阻断与癫痫发病率下降之间的初步因果关系,这可能是通过复杂的神经炎症通路介导的。这些结果鼓励进一步开展深入研究,包括更大规模的队列和多方面的精神评估,以证实这些发现,并更透彻地阐明IL-6信号在癫痫中的神经-精神影响。对IL6R阻断的探索可能预示着一条新的治疗途径,它不仅能控制癫痫发作,还能解决通常与癫痫相关的更广泛的精神和认知障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exploring the role of interleukin-6 receptor blockade in epilepsy and associated neuropsychiatric conditions through a mendelian randomization study.

Background: The interplay between inflammation, immune dysregulation, and the onset of neurological disorders, including epilepsy, has become increasingly recognized. Interleukin (IL)-6, a pro-inflammatory cytokine, is suspected to not only mediate traditional inflammatory pathways but also contribute to neuroinflammatory responses that could underpin neuropsychiatric symptoms and broader psychiatric disorders in epilepsy patients. The role of IL-6 receptor (IL6R) blockade presents an intriguing target for therapeutic intervention due to its potential to attenuate these processes.

Aim: To explore the potential of IL6R blockade in reducing the risk of epilepsy and investigate whether this pathway might also influence associated psychiatric and neuropsychiatric conditions due to neuroinflammation.

Methods: Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis employing single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the vicinity of the IL6R gene (total individuals = 408225) was used to evaluate the putative causal relationship between IL6R blockade and epilepsy (total cases/controls = 12891/312803), focal epilepsy (cases/controls = 7526/399290), and generalized epilepsy (cases/controls = 1413/399287). SNP weights were determined by their effect on C-reactive protein (CRP) levels and integrated using inverse variance-weighted meta-analysis as surrogates for IL6R effects. To address potential outlier and pleiotropic influences, sensitivity analyses were conducted employing a variety of MR methods under different modeling assumptions.

Results: The genetic simulation targeting IL6R blockade revealed a modest but significant reduction in overall epilepsy risk [inverse variance weighting: Odds ratio (OR): 0.827; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.685-1.000; P = 0.05]. Subtype analysis showed variability, with no significant effect observed in generalized, focal, or specific childhood and juvenile epilepsy forms. Beyond the primary inflammatory marker CRP, the findings also suggested potential non-inflammatory pathways mediated by IL-6 signaling contributing to the neurobiological landscape of epilepsy, hinting at possible links to neuroinflammation, psychiatric symptoms, and associated mental disorders.

Conclusion: The investigation underscored a tentative causal relationship between IL6R blockade and decreased epilepsy incidence, likely mediated via complex neuroinflammatory pathways. These results encouraged further in-depth studies involving larger cohorts and multifaceted psychiatric assessments to corroborate these findings and more thoroughly delineate the neuro-psychiatric implications of IL-6 signaling in epilepsy. The exploration of IL6R blockade could herald a novel therapeutic avenue not just for seizure management but also for addressing the broader psychiatric and cognitive disturbances often associated with epilepsy.

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