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Dietary factors and the risk of atopic dermatitis: A Mendelian randomization study.

Yuhui CheJinyao YuanQian WangMengsong LiuDadong TangMulan ChenXinyu XiaoYaobin PangSiyan ChenWen HanZhiyong XiaoJinhao ZengJing Guo
Published in: The British journal of nutrition (2024)
Previous studies have revealed an association between dietary factors and atopic dermatitis (AD). To explore whether there was a causal relationship between diet and AD, we performed Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis. The dataset of 21 dietary factors was obtained from UK Biobank. The dataset for AD was obtained from the publicly available FinnGen consortium. The main research method was the inverse-variance weighting method, which was supplemented by MR‒Egger, weighted median and weighted mode. In addition, sensitivity analysis was performed to ensure the accuracy of the results. The study revealed that beef intake (OR=0.351; 95% CI:0.145-0.847; p=0.020) and white bread intake (OR=0.141; 95% CI:0.030-0.656; p=0.012) may be protective factors against AD. There were no causal relationships between AD and any other dietary intake factors. Sensitivity analysis showed that our results were reliable, and no heterogeneity or pleiotropy was found. Therefore, we believe that beef intake may be associated with a reduced risk of AD. Although white bread was significant in the IVW analysis, there was large uncertainty in the results given the wide 95% CI. Other factors were not associated with AD in this study.
Keyphrases
  • atopic dermatitis
  • magnetic resonance
  • single cell
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • weight gain
  • network analysis