Abstract

Epidemiological studies have reported an association between Parkinson's disease (PD) and restless legs syndrome. We aimed to use genetic data to study whether these 2 disorders are causally linked or share genetic architecture. We performed two-sample Mendelian randomization and linkage disequilibrium score regression using summary statistics from recent genome-wide meta-analyses of PD and restless legs syndrome. We found no evidence for a causal relationship between restless legs syndrome (as the exposure) and PD (as the outcome, inverse variance-weighted; b=-0.003, SE=0.031, P=0.916; F statistic=217.5). Reverse Mendelian randomization also did not demonstrate any causal effect of PD on restless legs syndrome (inverse variance-weighted; b=-0.012, SE=0.023, P=0.592; F statistic=191.7). Linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis demonstrated lack of genetic correlation between restless legs syndrome and PD (rg=-0.028, SE=0.042, P=0.507). There was no evidence for a causal relationship or genetic correlation between restless legs syndrome and PD. The associations observed in epidemiological studies could be attributed, in part, to confounding or nongenetic determinants. © 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

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