Dili Song, Yong Li, Yuanyuan Li, Ying Zou, Yongguang Cai
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在动物研究中,夜班工作与癌症风险有关,但流行病学证据仍然不足且相互矛盾。本研究试图通过双样本孟德尔随机化(MR)研究来调查NSW与13种常见癌症之间的因果关系。从UK Biobank中提取与NSW相关的遗传变异,并选择为工具变量(IVs)。从相关协会和生物银行获得13种癌症的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)数据。使用反方差加权(IVW)、MR-Egger和加权中位数(WM)来估计因果关系。进行敏感性分析,包括MR-Egger截距检验、MR-PRESSO、留一分析和漏斗图,以检测多效性和异质性。NSW持续时间与宫颈癌(IVW: p = 0.028)和胃癌(IVW: p = 0.011)的风险之间存在暗示的因果关系。其他癌症无显著相关性(p < 0.05)。这些发现表明,需要减少NSW持续时间,限制夜间光照,以维持昼夜节律,降低癌症风险。
The length of night shift work is closely associated with cancer risk: A pan-cancer study of Mendelian randomization study.
Night shift work (NSW) has been associated with cancer risk in animal studies, but epidemiological evidence remains insufficient and contradictory. This study sought to investigate the causal association between NSW and 13 common cancers using a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study. Genetic variants associated with NSW were extracted from the UK Biobank and selected as instrumental variables (IVs). Genome-wide association study (GWAS) data for 13 cancers were obtained from relevant consortia and biobanks. Causality was estimated using inverse-variance weighted (IVW), MR-Egger, and weighted median (WM). Sensitivity analyses, including MR-Egger intercept tests, MR-PRESSO, leave-one-out analyses, and funnel plots, were conducted to detect pleiotropy and heterogeneity. A suggestive causal association was found between NSW duration and risks of cervical (IVW: p = 0.028) and gastric cancer (IVW: p = 0.011). No significant associations were observed for other cancers (p > 0.05). These findings suggest the need to reduce NSW duration and limit nocturnal light exposure to maintain circadian rhythms and mitigate cancer risks.
期刊介绍:
Chronobiology International is the journal of biological and medical rhythm research. It is a transdisciplinary journal focusing on biological rhythm phenomena of all life forms. The journal publishes groundbreaking articles plus authoritative review papers, short communications of work in progress, case studies, and letters to the editor, for example, on genetic and molecular mechanisms of insect, animal and human biological timekeeping, including melatonin and pineal gland rhythms. It also publishes applied topics, for example, shiftwork, chronotypes, and associated personality traits; chronobiology and chronotherapy of sleep, cardiovascular, pulmonary, psychiatric, and other medical conditions. Articles in the journal pertain to basic and applied chronobiology, and to methods, statistics, and instrumentation for biological rhythm study.
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