Abstract

BackgroundThe causal association between coffee consumption and the risk of OA is limited. This study was conducted to identify the potential causal effects of coffee consumption on total, knee, hip, and self-reported OA.MethodsGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) of OA were derived from the UK Biobank, comprising 50,508 participants of European ancestry (10,083 with cases and 40,425 controls), and genetic data for specific diagnosed knee OA (4462 cases and 17,885 controls), hip OA (12,625 cases and 50,898 controls), and self-reported OA (12,658 cases and 50,898 controls). Primary and secondary genetic instruments (11 SNPs and 8 SNPs) were selected as instrumental variants from GWAS among 375,833 and 91,462 participants. Two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses were performed to test the effects of the selected single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and the OA risk. The causal effects were primarily estimated using weighted median and inverse-variance weighted method with several sensitivity analyses.ResultsThe MR analyses suggested that genetically predicted 1% increase of coffee consumption was associated with an increased risk of overall OA (OR:1.009, 95% CI:1.003-1.016), knee OA (OR:1.023, 95% CI:1.009-1.038), self-reported OA (OR:1.007, 95% CI:1.003-1.011), but not hip OA (OR: 1.012, 95%CI:0.999-1.024) using primary genetic instruments. Similar results were found when using secondary genetic instruments that genetically predicted coffee consumption (cups/day). Additionally, the sensitivity analyses for leave-one-out methods supported a robust association between exposure traits and OA.ConclusionOur findings indicate that genetically predicted coffee consumption exerts a causal effect on total, knee, and self-reported OA risk, but not at the hip. Further research is required to unravel the role of coffee consumption in OA prevention.

Highlights

  • Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent degenerative joint dysfunction worldwide and one of the principal causes of years lived with disability, as stated by the 2010 World Health Organization Global Burden of Disease study [1,2,3]

  • As for secondary genetic instruments, 10 significant SNPs associated with the cups of coffee consumed per day were identified from another genome-wide association metaanalysis (GWAS), including 91,462 participants released by the Coffee and Caffeine Genetics Consortium (CCGC) [26]

  • All instrumental variables were associated with the exposure at a genome-wide significance level (P

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Summary

Introduction

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent degenerative joint dysfunction worldwide and one of the principal causes of years lived with disability, as stated by the 2010 World Health Organization Global Burden of Disease study [1,2,3]. This chronic disease is clinically characterized by chronic pain, crepitus, morning stiffness, and radiographic discoveries in diarthrodial joints such as the knee and hip. The causal association between coffee consumption and the risk of OA is limited. This study was conducted to identify the potential causal effects of coffee consumption on total, knee, hip, and self-reported OA

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