Annals of Medicine (Dec 2022)

The causal relationships between obstructive sleep apnea and elevated CRP and TNF-α protein levels

  • Minhan Yi,
  • Wangcheng Zhao,
  • Yun Tan,
  • Quanming Fei,
  • Kun Liu,
  • Ziliang Chen,
  • Yuan Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2081873
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 1
pp. 1578 – 1589

Abstract

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Background Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and inflammation are closely related. This study aimed to evaluate the associations and causal effect between C-reactive protein (CRP) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) levels and OSA.Methods Pooled analysis was conducted to compare the expression differences of CRP and TNF-α between OSA patients with different severity and controls, and between continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and non-CPAP interventions for OSA patients. Using published GWAS summary statistics, we conducted a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian Randomization (MR) to estimate the causal relationships between CRP and TNF-α levels and OSA risk. Effect estimates were evaluated using inverse-variance weighted (IVW) as primary method, and several other MR methods as sensitivity analysis.Results Both TNF-α (WMD [95%CI] = 5.86 [4.80–6.93] pg/ml, p < .00001) and CRP (WMD [95%CI] = 2.66 [2.15–3.17] mg/L, p < .00001), showed a significant increase in OSA patients compared with controls and this increasing trend was associated with OSA severity. Besides, compared to blank control (non-CPAP), CPAP treatment can reduce high TNF-α (WMD [95%CI]= −4.44 [−4.81, −4.07]pg/ml, p < .00001) and CRP (WMD [95%CI]= −0.91 [−1.65, −0.17] mg/l, p = .02) in OSA. Moreover, the primary MR analysis by IVW showed that OSA was the genetically predicted cause of elevated CRP (estimate: 0.095; 95% CI, [0.010–0.179]; p = .029) using six SNPs as the instrument variable, which were repeated by weighted median (estimate: 0.053; 95% CI, [0.007, 0.100]; p =.024) and MR RAPS (estimate: 0.109; 95% CI, [0.079, 0.140]; p = 1.98x10−12). Besides, the causal effect from elevated CRP on increased OSA risk was almost significant by IVW (OR:1.053; 95% CI, [1.000, 1.111]; p = .053). However, there were no causal associations between TNF-α and OSA from both directions.Conclusions Increased CRP and TNF-α were associated with OSA severity and sensible to CPAP treatment. Also, OSA had a suggestive causal effect on elevated CRP.

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