The Role of Circulating Fatty Acids in Mediating the Effect of Insomnia on Heart Failure: A Two-Step, Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study.
Study Design
- Study Type
- mendelian randomization
- Population
- GWAS-based Mendelian randomization using population-level genomic summary data; investigates causal pathways between insomnia, circulating fatty acids, and heart failure
- Intervention
- The Role of Circulating Fatty Acids in Mediating the Effect of Insomnia on Heart Failure: A Two-Step, Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Study. Not applicable (Mendelian randomization using genetic instruments/SNPs)
- Comparator
- Genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary data for insomnia, fatty acids, and heart failure
- Primary Outcome
- Mediating role of circulating fatty acids in causal association between insomnia and heart failure
- Effect Direction
- Positive
- Risk of Bias
- Low
Abstract
PURPOSE: Previous studies support the causal effect of insomnia on heart failure. Fatty acid metabolism plays key roles in the occurrence and development of heart failure. It is unclear whether fatty acids play roles in the causal association between insomnia and heart failure. This study aims to investigate the mediating role of fatty acids in the association between insomnia and heart failure. METHODS: We performed two-step, two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis by applying SNPs as genetic instruments for exposures, mediators and outcomes. Summary data obtained from genome-wide association studies for insomnia, proposed fatty acid mediators and heart failure were used in this study. The overall effect of insomnia on heart failure includes direct and indirect effects. RESULTS: Genetically predicted insomnia has a significant causal effect on circulating total fatty acids, saturated fatty acids, monounsaturated fatty acids and omega-3 fatty acids. In addition, different circulating fatty acids have no causal effect on insomnia incidence. A significant positive correlation between genetic predicted insomnia and heart failure (OR = 1.10, 95% CI: 1.06-1.14, P<0.001) was observed. Finally, we found that circulating fatty acids play a mediating role in the causal association between insomnia and heart failure. Total fatty acids, saturated fatty acids and monounsaturated fatty acids explained 3% (95% CI: 0%-7.5%), 3% (95% CI: -1.1%-7.5%), 4% (95% CI: 0%- 9.7%) of the overall effect of insomnia on heart failure, respectively. CONCLUSION: These results support circulating fatty acids as potential mediators in the causal association between insomnia and heart failure.
TL;DR
Results support circulating fatty acids as potential mediators in the causal association between insomnia and heart failure and find that circulating fatty acids play a mediating role in the causal association between insomnia and heart failure.