Causal Relationship between Gut Microbiota and Pulmonary Embolism: An Analysis Using Mendelian Randomization
Categoría del artículo: Original Paper
Publicado en línea: 18 jun 2025
Páginas: 153 - 164
Recibido: 16 dic 2024
Aceptado: 09 abr 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.33073/pjm-2025-013
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© 2025 LILAN CEN et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Previous research has demonstrated a connection between an unbalanced gut microbiome (GM) and lung diseases, suggesting that gut bacteria may affect lung health through the “gut-lung” axis. However, the direct connection between GM and pulmonary embolism (PE) is unclear. Mendelian randomization studies were used to investigate GM’s genetic relationship with PE. A total of 18,340 independent genewide association studies (GWAS) yielded single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) linked to the GM, which were then used as instrumental variables in a multiple regression analysis (MR) to examine the effect of GM on the risk of PE within the IEU Open GWAS project, which included 2,118 PE cases and 359,076 controls. The principal analytical methodology utilized in this research was inverse variance weighting (IVW), complemented by assessments for pleiotropy and heterogeneity to confirm the results’ resilience. The findings of this study are predominantly derived from the IVW method, providing evidence for causal associations between four distinct genera of GM and the risk of PE. Specifically, our analysis suggests that