Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-r6c6k Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-08T02:05:59.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Relationship between serum vitamin D levels and thyroid- and parathyroid-related diseases: a Mendelian randomisation study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2024

Lirong Zhang
Affiliation:
School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University; Department of Pharmacy, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Congting Hu
Affiliation:
School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University; Department of Pharmacy, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Xinmiao Lin
Affiliation:
School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University; Department of Pharmacy, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Huiting Lin
Affiliation:
School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University; Department of Pharmacy, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Wenhua Wu
Affiliation:
School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University; Department of Pharmacy, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Jiaqin Cai
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacy, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou University Affiliated Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Hong Sun*
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacy, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou University Affiliated Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
Xiaoxia Wei*
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacy, Fujian Provincial Hospital, Shengli Clinical Medical College of Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou University Affiliated Provincial Hospital, Fuzhou, China
*
*Corresponding authors: Xiaoxia Wei, email xxwei0321@outlook.com; Hong Sun, email sunhong7777@fjmu.edu.cn
*Corresponding authors: Xiaoxia Wei, email xxwei0321@outlook.com; Hong Sun, email sunhong7777@fjmu.edu.cn
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Previous studies have indicated an association between vitamin D and thyroid- and parathyroid-related diseases. However, it remains unclear whether it is a cause of the disease, a side effect of treatment or a consequence of the disease. The Mendelian randomisation (MR) study strengthens the causal inference by controlling for non-heritable environmental confounders and reverse causation. In this study, a two-sample bidirectional MR analysis was conducted to investigate the causal relationship between serum vitamin D levels and thyroid- and parathyroid-related diseases. Inverse variance weighted, weighted median and MR-Egger methods were performed, the Cochran Q test was used to evaluate the heterogeneity and the MR-PRESSO and MR-Egger intercepts were utilised to assess the possibility of pleiotropy. The Bonferroni-corrected significance threshold was 0·0038. At the Bonferroni-corrected significance level, we found that vitamin D levels suggestively decreased the risk of benign parathyroid adenoma (OR = 0·244; 95 % CI 0·074, 0·802; P = 0·0202) in the MR analyses. In the reverse MR study, a genetically predicted risk of thyroid cancer suggestively increased the risk of elevated vitamin D (OR = 1·007; 95 % CI 1·010, 1·013; P = 0·0284), chronic thyroiditis significantly increased the risk of elevated vitamin D (OR = 1·007; 95 % CI 1·002, 1·011; P = 0·0030) and thyroid nodules was significantly decreased the vitamin D levels (OR = 0·991; 95 % CI 0·985, 0·997; P = 0·0034). The findings might be less susceptible to horizontal pleiotropy and heterogeneity (P > 0·05). This study from a gene perspective indicated that chronic thyroiditis and thyroid nodules may impact vitamin D levels, but the underlying mechanisms require further investigation.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society
Figure 0

Fig. 1. An overview of the Mendelian randomisation study design.

Figure 1

Table 1. Detailed description of the genome-wide association study database in this study

Figure 2

Fig. 2. The Mendelian randomisation findings of serum vitamin D levels and benign parathyroid adenoma.

Figure 3

Table 2. Variability and diversity of findings exist regarding the relationship between serum vitamin D levels and benign parathyroid adenoma, thyroid cancer, chronic thyroiditis and thyroid nodule

Figure 4

Fig. 3. The relevant plot displaying the relationship between serum vitamin D levels and benign parathyroid adenoma. Scatter plots (a) showing the Mendelian randomisation (MR) effect of each exposure on benign parathyroid adenoma. Individual inverse variance (IV) associations with serum vitamin D levels risk are displayed v. individual IV associations with benign parathyroid adenoma in black dots. The 95 % CI of OR for each IV is shown by vertical and horizontal lines. The slopes of the lines represent the estimated causal effects of the MR methods. Forest plots (b) show the susceptibility to the risk of benign parathyroid adenoma; the red points show the combined causal estimate using all SNP together in a single instrument, using two different methods (MR-Egger and inverse variance weighted). Leave-one-out plots (c) for serum vitamin D levels on benign parathyroid adenoma. If all the error lines were consistent to the right or left of 0, the results were deemed reliable. Funnel plots (d) showing the inverse variance weighted MR estimates of serum vitamin D levels and SNP in patients with benign parathyroid adenoma v. 1/se (1/SEIV).

Figure 5

Fig. 4. The Mendelian randomisation results of thyroid cancer, chronic thyroiditis and thyroid nodules with serum vitamin D levels.

Figure 6

Fig. 5. The relevant plot displaying the relationship between thyroid cancer and serum vitamin D levels. Scatter plots (a) showing the Mendelian randomisation (MR) effect of each exposure on serum vitamin D levels. Individual inverse variance (IV) associations with thyroid cancer risk are displayed v. individual IV associations with serum vitamin D levels in black dots. The 95 % CI of OR for each IV is shown by vertical and horizontal lines. The slopes of the lines represent the estimated causal effects of the MR methods. Forest plots (b) showing the susceptibility to the risk of serum vitamin D levels; the red points show the combined causal estimate using all SNP together in a single instrument, using two different methods (MR-Egger and inverse variance weighted). Leave-one-out plots (c) for thyroid cancer on serum vitamin D levels. If all the error lines were consistent to the right or left of 0, the results are deemed reliable. Funnel plots (d) showing the inverse variance weighted MR estimates of thyroid cancer SNP with serum vitamin D levels v. 1/se (1/seIV).

Figure 7

Fig. 6. The relevant plot displaying the relationship between chronic thyroiditis and serum vitamin D levels. Scatter plots (a) showing the Mendelian randomisation (MR) effect of each exposure on serum vitamin D levels. Individual inverse variance (IV) associations with thyroid cancer risk are displayed v. individual IV associations with serum vitamin D levels in black dots. The 95 % CI of OR for each IV is shown by vertical and horizontal lines. The slopes of the lines represent the estimated causal effects of the MR methods. Forest plots (b) showing the susceptibility to the risk of serum vitamin D levels; the red points show the combined causal estimate using all SNP together in a single instrument, using two different methods (MR-Egger and inverse variance weighted). Leave-one-out plots (c) for chronic thyroiditis on serum vitamin D levels. If all the error lines were consistent to the right or left of 0, the results are deemed reliable. Funnel plots (d) showing the inverse variance weighted MR estimates of chronic thyroiditis SNP with serum vitamin D levels v. 1/se (1/seIV).

Figure 8

Fig. 7. The relevant plot displaying the relationship between thyroid nodules and Serum vitamin D levels. Scatter plots (a) showing the Mendelian randomisation (MR) effect of each exposure on serum vitamin D levels. Individual inverse variance (IV) associations with thyroid cancer risk are displayed v. individual IV associations serum vitamin D levels in black dots. The 95 % CI of OR for each IV is shown by vertical and horizontal lines. The slopes of the lines represent the estimated causal effects of the MR methods. Forest plots (b) showing the susceptibility to the risk of serum vitamin D levels; the red points showed the combined causal estimate using all SNP together in a single instrument, using two different methods (MR-Egger and inverse variance weighted). Leave-one-out plots (c) for thyroid nodules on serum vitamin D levels. If all the error lines were consistent to the right or left of 0, the results are deemed reliable. Funnel plots (d) showing the inverse variance weighted MR estimates of thyroid nodules SNP with serum vitamin D levels v. 1/se (1seIV).

Supplementary material: File

Zhang et al. supplementary material

Zhang et al. supplementary material
Download Zhang et al. supplementary material(File)
File 399.1 KB