Higher body mass index is a causal risk factor for skin infections: a Mendelian randomisation study using UK Biobank and FinnGen

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Abstract

BackgroundInfections remain a leading cause of mortality and morbidity globally. Obesity is associated with increased infection risk in observational studies, however is it unclear if this association is causal. We used Mendelian randomisation to evaluate the potential causal role of higher BMI on common bacterial, viral, and fungal infections.MethodsWe used the UK Biobank and FinnGen, large datasets of health information and genotyping data. In UK Biobank (N = 502,131, N = 230,542 with linked GP records) we identified common infections in the linked health records for primary care and hospital admissions: skin infections (bacterial skin infections, fungal skin infections), respiratory infections (bacterial pneumonia, influenza, non-influenza viral respiratory tract infections), and urogenital infections (bacterial urinary tract infections, fungal genital infections). We assessed observational associations between BMI and infections using logistic regression. We used one-sample Mendelian randomisation to test for a causal effect of BMI on infections. We also used summary statistics from a BMI genome-wide association study, and infection outcomes from FinnGen (N = 500,348) to perform two-sample Mendelian randomisation and sensitivity analyses.Results151,035 (65.5%) participants in UK Biobank with linked GP records had a record of infection in primary care, and 93,976 (18.7%) participants had a record of hospitalisation with infection. Higher BMI was observationally associated with all infection types. One-sample MR demonstrates that higher BMI has a causal effect on skin infections in primary care (bacterial skin infections: Odds Ratio [OR] 1.37 [95%CI: 1.24-1.53] per 5 kg/m2 increase in BMI, p<0.001, fungal skin infections: OR 1.34 [95%CI: 1.18-1.53, p<0.001) and hospitalisation with skin infections (bacterial skin infections: OR 1.93 [95%CI: 1.71-2.19] per 5 kg/m2 increase in BMI, p<0.001, fungal skin infections: OR 2.81 [95%CI: 1.58-4.97, p<0.001). Two-sample MR provided further evidence of a causal effect of higher BMI on skin infections that is robust to pleiotropy. One-sample MR suggested evidence of a causal effect of higher BMI on some respiratory infections. However, two-sample MR sensitivity analyses suggest that this association is affected by pleiotropy. There was little evidence of a causal role of higher BMI in urogenital infections.ConclusionsMendelian randomisation provides strong evidence that higher BMI is a causal risk factor for bacterial and fungal skin infections. Weight loss interventions could help reduce the risk of mild and severe skin infections and be targeted to those at highest risk.

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