Investigating causal relationships between extensive peripheral immune cell phenotypes and preeclampsia: A bi‐directional Mendelian randomization analysis

Adult 0303 health sciences 03 medical and health sciences Phenotype Pre-Eclampsia Pregnancy Hypertension Humans Reproducibility of Results Female Mendelian Randomization Analysis
DOI: 10.1111/aji.13840 Publication Date: 2024-04-12T10:39:25Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractProblemPreeclampsia, a multifaceted condition during pregnancy characterized by hypertension and organ dysfunction, poses significant risks to both maternal and fetal health. This study aims to investigate the bidirectional causal relationship between peripheral immune cell phenotypes and preeclampsia using a two‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach.Method of studyGenetic data from two sizable cohorts were utilized: 3757 individuals from Sardinia, providing information on 731 immune traits, and 200 929 Finnish adult females, encompassing 6663 preeclampsia cases. Single‐nucleotide polymorphisms served as instrumental variables. The MR analyses employed the inverse variance‐weighted (IVW) method as the primary tool, supplemented by MR‐Egger, weighted median, and weighted mode methods to enhance reliability and address potential heterogeneity and horizontal pleiotropy.ResultsAmong the 731 immune cell phenotypes studied, 18 displayed a suggestive positive association (IVW p < .05) with heightened preeclampsia risk, while 20 exhibited a suggestive negative association linked to reduced risk. Following false discovery rate (FDR) adjustment, four immune phenotypes showed significant associations with decreased preeclampsia risk: CD27 on CD24+ CD27+ B cells (B‐cell panel) (odds ratio [OR] = 0.927, PFDR = 0.061), CD33+ HLA DR+ CD14− absolute count (OR = 0.963, PFDR = 0.061), CD80 on plasmacytoid dendritic cells (OR = 0.923, PFDR = 0.061); and CD80 on CD62L+ plasmacytoid dendritic cells (OR = 0.923, PFDR = 0.061). In the reverse‐direction MR analysis, no significant causal effects of preeclampsia on immune cell phenotypes were observed.ConclusionsThis study provides quantifiable evidence linking specific immune cell phenotypes to the risk of developing preeclampsia. This novel understanding of the immunological aspects underlying preeclampsia's pathogenesis could lead to innovative therapeutic strategies centered on immune modulation.
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