Frontiers in Oncology (Jan 2023)

Ten interleukins and risk of prostate cancer

  • Bing-Hui Li,
  • Bing-Hui Li,
  • Si-Yu Yan,
  • Li-Sha Luo,
  • Xian-Tao Zeng,
  • Xian-Tao Zeng,
  • Yong-Bo Wang,
  • Xing-Huan Wang,
  • Xing-Huan Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1108633
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundInterleukins (ILs) have been reported to be related to prostate cancer. The aims of this study were to estimate the levels for several key interleukins in prostate cancer and the causal effects between them.MethodsWe conducted a bi-directional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study to assess the causal associations between ILs and prostate cancer. Genetic instruments and summary-level data for 10 ILs were obtained from three genome-wide association meta-analyses. Prostate cancer related data were obtained from the PRACTICAL (79,148 cases and 61,106 controls), UK Biobank (7,691 cases and 169,762 controls) and FinnGen consortium (10,414 cases and 124,994 controls), respectively.ResultsThe odds ratio of prostate cancer was 0.92 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.89, 0.96; P=1.58×10-05) and 1.12 (95% CI, 1.07, 1.17; P=6.61×10-07) for one standard deviation increase in genetically predicted IL-1ra and IL-6 levels, respectively. Genetically predicted levels of IL-1ß, IL-2a, IL-6ra, IL-8, IL-16, IL-17, IL-18, and IL-27 were not associated with the risk of prostate cancer. Reverse MR analysis did not find the associations between genetic liability to prostate cancer and higher levels of IL-1ra (β, -0.005; 95% CI, -0.010, 0.001; P=0.111) and IL-6 (β, 0.002; 95% CI, -0.011, 0.014; P=0.755).ConclusionThis MR study suggests that long-term IL-6 may increase the risk of prostate cancer and IL-1ra may reduce it.

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