Frontiers in Endocrinology (Nov 2023)

Causal relationship between breakfast skipping and bone mineral density: a two-sample Mendelian randomized study

  • Jinsheng Yu,
  • Chen Zhuang,
  • Wenxuan Guo,
  • Xing Zhou,
  • Yixuan Chen,
  • Likang Wang,
  • Wenkai Li,
  • Yiwen Zhu,
  • Rujie Zhuang,
  • Kun Tian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1200892
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo explore the causal association between breakfast skipping and bone mineral density (BMD) through two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis.MethodsA two-sample MR approach was adopted to explore the causal relationship of breakfast skipping with BMDs (across three skeletal sites and five age groups). Publicly available genome-wide association study summary data were used for MR analysis. We used five methods to estimate the causal associations between breakfast skipping and BMDs: inverse-variance weighting (IVW), MR-Egger, weighted median, simple mode, and weighted mode. IVW was used for the main analysis and the remaining four methods were used as supplementary analyses. The heterogeneity of the MR results was determined using IVW and MR-Egger methods. The pleiotropy of the MR results was determined using MR-Egger intercept. Furthermore, a leave-one-out test was performed to determine whether the MR results were affected by a single nucleotide polymorphism.ResultsWith the IVW method, we did not find any causal relationship between breakfast skipping and forearm, femoral neck, and lumbar spine BMD. Subsequently, when we included BMD data stratified by five different age groups in the analysis, the results showed that there was no apparent causal effect between breakfast skipping and age-stratified BMD. This finding was supported by all four supplementary methods (P > 0.05 for all methods). No heterogeneity or horizontal pleiotropy was detected in any of the analyses (P > 0.05). The leave-one-out tests conducted in the analyses did not identify any single nucleotide polymorphism that could have influenced the MR results, indicating the reliability of our findings.ConclusionNo causal effect was found between breakfast skipping and BMD (across three skeletal sites and five age groups).

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