1Department of Respiratory Medicine, Qingzhou Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Qingzhou People's Hospital;2Department of AIDS Voluntary Counseling and Testing, Qingzhou Center for Disease Control and Prevention
刊名
World Journal of Clinical Cases
年份
2022
卷号
第10卷
期号
第31期
页码
11403-11410
ISSN
2307-8960
分类号
R766
摘要
BACKGROUND Lipids increase the risk of sleep apnea; however, the causality between them is still inconclusive.AIM To explore the causal relationship between serum lipids and sleep apnea using two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis.METHODS Single nucleotide polymorphism data related to serum lipids were obtained from the Global Lipids Genetics Consortium study, which included 188578individuals of European ancestry. Additionally, sleep apnea-related SNP data were collected from the United Kin...更多
BACKGROUND Lipids increase the risk of sleep apnea; however, the causality between them is still inconclusive.AIM To explore the causal relationship between serum lipids and sleep apnea using two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis.METHODS Single nucleotide polymorphism data related to serum lipids were obtained from the Global Lipids Genetics Consortium study, which included 188578individuals of European ancestry. Additionally, sleep apnea-related SNP data were collected from the United Kingdom Biobank study, which comprised 463005individuals of European ancestry. Two-sample MR analysis was performed to assess the causality between serum lipids and sleep apnea based on the above public data.RESULTS Genetically predicted low-density lipoprotein, high-density lipoprotein, triglyceride, and total cholesterol were causally unrelated to sleep apnea.CONCLUSION Our MR analysis suggests that genetically predicted serum lipids are not risk factors of sleep apnea.收起