Hospital-treated infectious diseases, infection burden and risk of Parkinson disease: An observational and Mendelian randomization study.

Hospital-treated infectious diseases, infection burden and risk of Parkinson disease: An observational and Mendelian randomization study.

Publication date: Jun 17, 2024

Experimental and cross-sectional evidence has suggested a potential role of infection in the ethology of Parkinson’s disease (PD). We aim to examine the longitudinal association of infections with the incidence of PD and to explore whether the increased risk is limited to specific infection type rather than infection burden. Based on the UK Biobank, hospital-treated infectious diseases and incident PD were ascertained through record linkage to national hospital inpatient registers. Infection burden was defined as the sum of the number of infection episodes over time and the number of co-occurring infections. The polygenic risk score (PRS) for PD was calculated. The genome-wide association studies (GWAS) used in two-sample Mendelian Randomization (MR) were obtained from observational cohort participants of mostly European ancestry. Hospital-treated infectious diseases were associated with an increased risk of PD (adjusted HR [aHR] 1. 35 [95 % CI 1. 20-1. 52]). This relationship persisted when analyzing new PD cases occurring more than 10 years post-infection (aHR 1. 22 [95 % CI 1. 04-1. 43]). The greatest PD risk was observed in neurological/eye infection (aHR 1. 72 [95 % CI 1. 32-2. 34]), with lower respiratory tract infection (aHR 1. 43 [95 % CI 1. 02-1. 99]) ranked the second. A dose-response association was observed between infection burden and PD risk within each PD-PRS tertile (p-trend 

Concepts Keywords
10years Cohort
Genome Infectious diseases
Inpatient Mendelian Randomization
Mendelian Parkinson’s disease
Polygenic

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH infectious diseases
disease MESH infection
disease MESH Parkinson disease
pathway KEGG Parkinson disease
disease MESH eye infection

Original Article

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