학술논문

Preliminary study of the effect of gut microbiota on the development of prostatitis
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Medical Genomics, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2024)
Subject
Prostatitis
Gut microbiota
Mendelian randomization
Causal effects
Risk factors
Internal medicine
RC31-1245
Genetics
QH426-470
Language
English
ISSN
1755-8794
Abstract
Abstract Background Dysbacteriosis of intestinal tract may cause systemic inflammation, making distant anatomical locations more susceptible to illness. Recent research has demonstrated that the microbiome can affect both prostatitis and the inflammation of the prostate that is linked to prostate cancer. It is still unclear, though, whether this relationship indicates causation. We conducted a Mendelian randomization investigation on two samples to fully uncover gut microbiota’s potential genetic causal role in prostatitis. Method Prostatitis (1859 prostatitis cases and 72,799 controls) was utilized as the outcome, while SNPs highly linked with 196 microbial taxa (18 340 people) were chosen as instrumental factors. Random effects, inverse variance weighting, weighted medians, and MR-Egger were used to analyze causal effects. The Cochran’s Q test, funnel plot, leave-one-out analysis, and MR-Egger intercept test were all used in the sensitivity analysis. Results A causal effect in lowering the incidence of prostatitis is anticipated for five gut microorganisms (Methanobacteria, Methanobacteriaceae, Erysipelatoclostridium, Parasutterella, and Slackia; P