Mendelian randomisation of eosinophils and other cell types in relation to lung function and disease

Author:

Guyatt AnnaORCID,John CatherineORCID,Williams Alexander T,Shrine NickORCID,Reeve Nicola F,Sayers Ian,Hall IanORCID,Wain Louise V,Sheehan Nuala,Dudbridge Frank,Tobin Martin D,

Abstract

RationaleEosinophils are associated with airway inflammation in respiratory disease. Eosinophil production and survival is controlled partly by interleukin-5: anti-interleukin-5 agents reduce asthma and response correlates with baseline eosinophil counts. However, whether raised eosinophils are causally related to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and other respiratory phenotypes is not well understood.ObjectivesWe investigated causality between eosinophils and: lung function, acute exacerbations of COPD, asthma-COPD overlap (ACO), moderate-to-severe asthma and respiratory infections.MethodsWe performed Mendelian randomisation (MR) using 151 variants from genome-wide association studies of blood eosinophils in UK Biobank/INTERVAL, and respiratory traits in UK Biobank/SpiroMeta, using methods relying on different assumptions for validity. We performed multivariable analyses using eight cell types where there was possible evidence of causation by eosinophils.Measurements and main resultsCausal estimates derived from individual variants were highly heterogeneous, which may arise from pleiotropy. The average effect of raising eosinophils was to increase risk of ACO (weighted median OR per SD eosinophils, 1.44 (95%CI 1.19 to 1.74)), and moderate-severe asthma (weighted median OR 1.50 (95%CI 1.23 to 1.83)), and to reduce forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) and FEV1(weighted median estimator, SD FEV1/FVC: −0.054 (95% CI −0.078 to −0.029), effect only prominent in individuals with asthma).ConclusionsBroad consistency across MR methods may suggest causation by eosinophils (although of uncertain magnitude), yet heterogeneity necessitates caution: other important mechanisms may be responsible for the impairment of respiratory health by these eosinophil-raising variants. These results could suggest that anti-IL5 agents (designed to lower eosinophils) may be valuable in treating other respiratory conditions, including people with overlapping features of asthma and COPD.

Funder

British Lung Foundation

Wellcome

Biomedical Research Centre

GlaxoSmithKline

Health Data Research - UK

National Institute for Health Research

British Heart Foundation

Medical Research Council

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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