Abstract

Some observational studies have suggested the association between thyroid function and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). However, it remains to be determined whether these associations are causal or not. The aim of this study was to investigate the underlying causal association between different thyroid function status and PCOS. Bidirectional Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was conducted to explore the impact of different thyroid function statuses on PCOS. The study included 10,074 individuals with PCOS and 103,164 controls for the primary analysis, with validation analysis repeated in the FinnGen R9 and EstBB PCOS cohorts. Female-specific thyroid function GWAS data were obtained from European population, including Hyperthyroidism (22,383 cases and 54,288 controls) and Hypothyroidism (27,383 cases and 54,288 controls) from the UK Biobank, and TSH (54,288 cases and 72,167 controls) and FT4 (49,269 cases and 72,167 controls) within the reference range from the ThyroidOmics Consortium. Inverse variance weighting (IVW) was chosen as the principal method, and sensitivity analysis was conducted to test for the presence of horizontal pleiotropy or heterogeneity. The IVW analysis indicated nominal significance between normal TSH levels and PCOS after adjusted for age and BMI [OR (95% CI) = 0.78(0.62,0.97), P = 0.029], suggesting that maintaining normal TSH levels might act as a protective factor against the pathogenesis of PCOS. Besides, in order to increase the statistical power, we pooled PCOS GWAS above together by meta-analysis and found PCOS contributed to the occurrence of hyperthyroidism [OR(95%CI) = 1.37(0.73,2.57), P = 0.012]. However, no causal relationship was found after Bonferroni correction (P-value < 0.0031). Although the MR analysis didn't indicate genetic causal association between thyroid function and PCOS after Bonferroni correction. Further efforts are needed to interpret the potential causal relationship between thyroid function and PCOS in different age and BMI subgroup.

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