Asthma causally affects the brain cortical structure: a mendelian randomization study.
The potential causal relationship between asthma and brain structures remains uncertain. We performed a two-sample Mendelian randomization to investigate the causal effects of various asthma phenotypes-unspecified asthma, moderate-to-severe asthma, childhood-onset asthma, and adult-onset asthma-on cerebral cortex structure. We utilized phenotype data derived from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). The ENIGMA Consortium GWAS provided outcome variables for surface area and thickness across the whole brain and 34 region-specific areas of the cerebral cortex. Using the inverse variance-weighted method as our primary estimation approach, we employed several techniques, including Cochran's Q statistic, the MR-PRESSO global test, MR-Egger, and weighted median, to assess heterogeneity and pleiotropy, thereby ensuring the robustness of our findings. Additionally, we conducted enrichment analyses of gene sets with causal effects on cortical structure and applied bioinformatics techniques to construct interaction networks and identify hub nodes. At the global level, adult-onset asthma was associated with a significant reduction in full cortical surface area (β = -58.4899, p = 0.0173). In regional analyses, moderate-to-severe asthma exhibited a more pronounced impact on the cerebral cortex compared to other phenotypes. Enrichment analysis revealed that pathways implicated in brain morphology among asthma patients were primarily linked to immune and inflammation-driven pathways. Our findings provide new evidence supporting a causal relationship between asthma and alterations in cortical structure, offering potential explanations for cognitive and psychiatric impairments observed in individual post-asthma.