mSphere (Nov 2024)

Genetic insight into the relationship between inflammatory bowel disease and Clostridioides difficile infection

  • Kelly C. Cushing-Damm,
  • Yanhua Chen,
  • Xiaomeng Du,
  • Annapurna Kuppa,
  • Chinmay Raut,
  • Antonino Oliveri,
  • Vincent L. Chen,
  • Brett Vanderwerff,
  • Matt Zawistowski,
  • Krishna Rao,
  • Peter Higgins,
  • Elizabeth K. Speliotes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00567-24
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are at increased risk of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). Herein, we aimed to determine if genetic risk contributes to this observed association. We carried out a genome-wide association study (GWAS) analysis in the Michigan Genomics Initiative and the United Kingdom Biobank for CDI based on ICD codes and meta-analyzed these results with similar publicly accessible GWAS summary statistics from Finngen. Conditional and joint multi-SNP analyses were used to identify independent associations. Imputation of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region with fine mapping was used to try to identify causal HLA allele groups. Two-sample bidirectional Mendelian randomization (MR) was implemented to determine causal relationships between IBD and CDI. A total of 3,500 cases of CDI and 674,323 controls were meta-analyzed, revealing one genome-wide significant variant for CDI, HLA-C;LINC02571-rs3134745-C (P = 4.27E−08), which annotated to the major histocompatibility complex on chromosome 6. While fine mapping did not identify a statistically significant HLA allele group, there was a suggestive signal for HLA-B*35:01 (P = 4.74e−04). Using two-sample MR, genetically predicted IBD was associated with increased risk of CDI (MR Egger [odds ratio {OR} 1.16, 95% confidence interval {CI} 1.02–1.31]). Subset analysis revealed that risk was primarily driven by genetically predicted ulcerative colitis (MR Egger [OR 1.22, 95% CI 1.05–1.41]). These results highlight the importance of the host immune response in CDI pathogenesis, help explain the observed relationship between IBD and CDI, and open new avenues for targeted treatment of CDI in IBD.IMPORTANCEData from this paper (i) provide reproducible evidence that susceptibility CDI is genetically mediated, (ii) highlight genetic risk as a mechanism for the increased risk of CDI in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, and (iii) point toward anti-interleukin-23 therapy as a common therapeutic strategy.

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