实用医学杂志 ›› 2026, Vol. 42 ›› Issue (10): 1873-1880.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1006-5725.2026.10.023

• 论著·临床实践 • 上一篇    

特定肠道菌群对头部创伤发病风险的因果效应:基于孟德尔随机化与荟萃分析

熊昕1,时朝阳1,陈雁信1,洪妙君1,徐振华2()   

  1. 1.广州中医药大学第二临床医学院(广州中医药大学第二附属医院),麻醉科,(广东 广州 510120 )
    2.广州中医药大学第二临床医学院(广州中医药大学第二附属医院),针灸科,(广东 广州 510120 )
  • 收稿日期:2026-04-07 出版日期:2026-05-25 发布日期:2026-05-27
  • 通讯作者: 徐振华 E-mail:xzh197011@163.com
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金项目(81974582)

Causal effects of gut microbiota on the risk of head injury: A two-sample Mendelian randomization study and meta-analysis

Xin XIONG1,Chaoyang SHI1,Yanxin CHEN1,Miaojun HONG1,Zhenhua XU2()   

  1. 1.Department of Anesthesiology,the Second Clinical College of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,Guangzhou 510120,Guangdong,China
    2.Department of Acupuncture,the Second Clinical College of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,Guangzhou 510120,Guangdong,China
  • Received:2026-04-07 Online:2026-05-25 Published:2026-05-27
  • Contact: Zhenhua XU E-mail:xzh197011@163.com

摘要:

目的 探讨肠道菌群与头部创伤发生风险之间的潜在因果关系。 方法 利用欧洲人群的基因组全关联研究(GWAS)汇总数据进行双样本孟德尔随机化(MR)分析。主要采用逆方差加权法(IVW)评估因果效应。在训练集(发现阶段)中筛选出IVW分析P < 0.05的肠道菌群后,在独立的测试集中进行验证,随后通过meta分析汇总总体效应。进一步采用多变量孟德尔随机化(MVMR)评估特定菌群的独立效应,并通过反向MR及Steiger检验排除反向因果关系。 结果 在训练集中,共识别出6个与头部创伤风险具有提示性关联的肠道菌群分类群。其中,结节真杆菌群(Eubacterium nodatum group)的危险效应在独立测试集中得到成功验证(IVW OR= 1.001,95%CI:1.000 ~ 1.002,P = 0.012)。两队列的Meta进一步支持4个分类群与头部创伤之间存在提示性因果关联。MVMR分析显示结节真杆菌群等对头部创伤风险具有独立的效应方向。需指出的是,上述阳性关联的效应量较小(OR值接近1),其临床意义有待进一步评估。 结论 本研究提供了初步的遗传学证据,提示肠道微生态(特别是结节真杆菌群等分类群)与头部创伤易感性之间可能存在因果关联。肠道菌群失调或可通过影响神经行为或全身炎症状态等途径增加创伤风险,为头部创伤的预防研究提供了新的肠-脑轴视角,但鉴于效应量较小且部分结果未在独立队列中重复验证,上述发现尚属探索性,后续仍需大样本多种族队列研究及机制实验加以证实。

关键词: 肠道菌群, 头部创伤, 因果效应, 孟德尔随机化, 荟萃分析

Abstract:

Objective To explore the potential causal relationship between the gut microbiota and the risk of head trauma. Methods We conducted a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to explore the potential causal relationship between gut microbiota and head injury, utilizing summary statistics from European ancestry cohorts. The inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method was employed as the primary analytical approach. A two-stage discovery-validation design was adopted. To guarantee reliability, significant findings from a training cohort were validated in an independent testing cohort, and then a meta-analysis was carried out. Moreover, multivariable Mendelian randomization (MVMR) was performed to evaluate independent effects, and reverse MR analysis was used to examine the direction of causality. Results In the discovery phase (training cohort), six bacterial taxa were identified as potentially associated with the risk of head injury. Crucially, the risk effect of the Eubacterium nodatum group was successfully replicated in the independent validation cohort (IVW OR: 1.001, P = 0.012). The meta-analysis of both cohorts further supported suggestive associations for four taxa. Notably, all the observed effect sizes were small (ORs close to 1), which warrants a cautious interpretation of the clinical relevance. Conclusions Our study offers preliminary genetic evidence indicating that specific gut microbial taxa might have a causal association with the risk of head injury. These findings imply that dysbiosis could affect injury susceptibility, possibly via neurocognitive or neuromuscular pathways. Nevertheless, considering the small effect sizes and partial replication, these results should be regarded as exploratory and necessitate further validation in larger, multi-ethnic cohorts.

Key words: gut microbiota, head injury, causal effects, Mendelian analysis, meta analysis

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