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Investigating the Causal Relationship of C-Reactive Protein with 32 Complex Somatic and Psychiatric Outcomes: A Large-Scale Cross-Consortium Mendelian Randomization Study.

Bram P PrinsAli AbbasiAnson WongAhmad VaezIlja NolteNora FranceschiniPhilip E StuartJavier Guterriez AchuryVanisha MistryJonathan P BradfieldAna M ValdesJose BrasAleksey Shatunovnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullnull nullChen LuBuhm HanSoumya RaychaudhuriSteve BevanMaureen D MayesLam C TsoiEvangelos EvangelouRajan P NairStruan F A GrantConstantin PolychronakosTimothy R D RadstakeDavid A van HeelMelanie L DunstanNicholas W WoodAmmar Al-ChalabiAbbas DehghanHakon HakonarsonHugh S MarkusJames T ElderJo KnightDan E ArkingTimothy D SpectorBobby P C KoelemanCornelia M van DuijnJavier MartinAndrew P MorrisRinse K WeersmaCisca WijmengaPatricia B MunroeJohn R B PerryJennie G PougetYalda JamshidiHarold SniederBehrooz Z Alizadeh
Published in: PLoS medicine (2016)
Genetically elevated CRP levels showed a significant potentially protective causal relationship with risk of schizophrenia. We observed nominal evidence at an observed p < 0.05 using either GRSCRP or GRSGWAS-with persistence after correction for heterogeneity-for a causal relationship of elevated CRP levels with psoriatic osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, knee osteoarthritis, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, serum albumin, and bipolar disorder. These associations remain yet to be confirmed. We cannot verify any causal effect of CRP level on any of the other common somatic and neuropsychiatric outcomes investigated in the present study. This implies that interventions that lower CRP level are unlikely to result in decreased risk for the majority of common complex outcomes.
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