Causal Relationship Between Sleep Traits and Risk of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study

Jul 5, 2022Frontiers in immunology

How Sleep Patterns May Influence the Risk of Lupus

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Abstract

No causal relationship was found between sleep traits and (SLE) in a sample of 7,219 cases and 15,991 controls.

  • Genetic variants associated with six sleep traits were analyzed using a two-sample approach.
  • The primary analysis showed no causal link between sleep traits—including , sleep duration, insomnia, and daytime sleepiness—and the risk of SLE.
  • The reverse analysis indicated that SLE does not have a causal effect on any sleep traits.
  • Multiple methods, including inverse variance weighted and MR Egger, consistently supported the absence of a causal relationship.

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Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the causal relationship between sleep traits and () using .
  • It analyzes genetic data from large cohorts to determine if sleep patterns influence risk or vice versa.
  • The study finds no evidence supporting a causal link between sleep traits and , nor between and sleep traits.

Essence

  • No causal relationship exists between genetically predicted sleep traits and () risk, nor vice versa.

Key takeaways

  • , sleep duration, insomnia, and daytime sleepiness do not causally influence the risk of . The analysis employed multiple methods, including inverse-variance weighted, MR Egger, and weighted median, all yielding consistent results.
  • does not causally affect sleep traits. The analysis showed no significant association between and sleep duration, insomnia, or , indicating that does not increase the risk of sleep disturbances.

Caveats

  • The study's sample consisted primarily of individuals of European ancestry, which may limit the generalizability of the findings to other populations.
  • Self-reported sleep data could introduce bias, as objective measures were not utilized.

Definitions

  • Mendelian randomization: A statistical method that uses genetic variants as instrumental variables to assess causal relationships between exposures and outcomes.
  • Chronotype: An individual's natural preference for being active during certain times of the day, affecting sleep timing.
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE): An autoimmune disease characterized by inflammation and damage to multiple organs, including skin, joints, and kidneys.

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