Previous observational studies have shown associations between vitamin Ds and FGIDS[Including irritable bowel syndrome(IBS) and functional dyspepsia(FD)]. However, the association is controversial and the causality remains unknown. In this study, two-sample MR was cited to explore the causal effect on FGIDS caused by vitamin D level and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D.
The GWASs of vitaminD and 25-hydroxyvitamin D, with 57-99 strongly related SNPs were all obtained from UK biobank. The GWASs of IBS and FD were obtained from FinnGen biobank with respectively 187,028 and 194,071 participants involved. Fixed-effect inverse variance weighted regression was used to evaluate causal estimates. Other statistical methods such as MR Egger, weighted median estimation, maximum likelihood estimation and penalty-weighted median estimation are also used to verify the accuracy of the main results.
Measuring by the IVW method, our research indicated that no causal relationship was detected between vitamin D intake and Functional gastrointestinal disorders [IVW, OR(vitamin D-IBS) = 0.909, 95% CI 0.789-1.053, p = 0.2017); OR(vitamin D-FD) = 1.0662, 95% CI 0.9182-1.2380, p = 0.4000]. As for serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D, no causal relationship was detected on FD(IVW, OR(25-hydroxyvitamin D-FD) = 0.9635, 95% CI 0.8039-1.1546, p = 0.6869). Nevertheless, a negative causal relationship was revealed between 25-hydroxyvitamin D and IBS(IVW, OR(25-hydroxyvitamin D-IBS) = 0.832, 95% CI 0.696-0.995, p = 0.0436). Sensitive analysis supported the main findings but did not suggest bias due to pleiotropy.
Our Mendelian randomization analyses suggest a negative causal relationship between 25-hydroxyvitamin D and IBS. For each additional SD increase of genetically determined 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels, the risk of IBS decreased by 16.8%.
© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.