Assessment of relationships between frailty and chronic pain: a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomisation study

Author:

Dai Zhisen12,Wu Yanlin34,Chen Junheng1,Huang Shuting1,Zheng Huizhe1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology, Clinical Oncology School of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Cancer Hospital , Fuzhou, Fujian , China

2. Institute of Pain Research, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Fujian Medical University , Fuzhou, Fujian , China

3. Department of Anesthesiology , Shengli Clinical Medical College, , Fuzhou, Fujian , China

4. Fujian Medical University , Shengli Clinical Medical College, , Fuzhou, Fujian , China

Abstract

Abstract Background Previous observational studies have indicated a complex association between chronic pain and frailty. This study aimed to examine the bidirectional causal relationship between frailty and chronic pain and to quantify mediating effects of known modifiable risk factors. Methods A bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis was applied in this study. Summary genome-wide association statistics for frailty, as defined by both frailty index (FI) and Fried Frailty Score (FFS), pain at seven site-specific chronic pain (SSCP) (headache, facial, neck/shoulder, stomach/abdominal, back, hip and knee) and multisite chronic pain (MCP) were extracted from populations of European ancestry. Genetic instrumental variables strongly correlated with each exposure were selected. The inverse-variance-weighted method was the primary method used in the MR, supplemented by a range of sensitivity and validation analyses. Two-step MR analysis was undertaken to evaluate the mediating effects of several proposed confounders. Results Genetically predicted higher FI and FFS were associated with an increased risk of MCP and specific types of SSCP, including neck/shoulder pain, stomach/abdominal pain, back pain, hip pain and knee pain. In the reverse direction analysis, genetic liability to MCP was found to be associated with increased FI and FFS. These results remained consistent across sensitivity and validation assessments. Two-step MR suggested a mediating role for body mass index, smoking initiation, physical inactivity, educational attainment and depression. Conclusions Our research provided genetic evidence that the association between frailty and chronic pain was bidirectional where the coexistence of both conditions will exacerbate each other.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging,General Medicine

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