Genetic Analysis of Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Its Relationship with Severe COVID-19.

Autor: Strausz, Satu, Agafonova, Elizabete, Tiullinen, Varvara, Kiiskinen, Tuomo, Broberg, Martin, Ruotsalainen, Sanni E., Koskela, Jukka, Bachour, Adel, Sofer, Tamar, Gottlieb, Daniel J., Palotie, Aarno, Palotie, Tuula, Ripatti, Samuli, Ollila, Hanna M.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Annals of the American Thoracic Society; Jun2024, Vol. 21 Issue 6, p961-970, 10p
Abstrakt: Rationale: Although patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) have a higher risk for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) hospitalization, the causal relationship has remained unexplored. Objectives: To understand the causal relationship between OSA and COVID-19 by leveraging data from vaccination and electronic health records, genetic risk factors from genome-wide association studies, and Mendelian randomization. Methods: We elucidated genetic risk factors for OSA using FinnGen (total N = 377,277), performing genome-wide association. We used the associated variants as instruments for univariate and multivariate Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses and computed absolute risk reduction against COVID-19 hospitalization with or without vaccination. Results: We identified nine novel loci for OSA and replicated our findings in the Million Veteran Program. Furthermore, MR analysis showed that OSA was a causal risk factor for severe COVID-19 (P = 9.41 × 10−4). Probabilistic modeling showed that the strongest genetic risk factor for OSA at the FTO locus reflected a signal of higher body mass index (BMI), whereas BMI-independent association was seen with the earlier reported SLC9A4 locus and a MECOM locus, which is a transcriptional regulator with 210-fold enrichment in the Finnish population. Similarly, multivariate MR analysis showed that the causality for severe COVID-19 was driven by BMI (multivariate MR P = 5.97 × 10−6, β = 0.47). Finally, vaccination reduced the risk for COVID-19 hospitalization more in the patients with OSA than in the non-OSA controls, with respective absolute risk reductions of 13.3% versus 6.3%. Conclusions: Our analysis identified novel genetic risk factors for OSA and showed that OSA is a causal risk factor for severe COVID-19. The effect is predominantly explained by higher BMI and suggests BMI-dependent effects at the level of individual variants and at the level of comorbid causality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index