key: cord-0019749-jufe05nr authors: Ryan, David K.; Karhunen, Ville; Walker, Drew J.; Gill, Dipender title: Inhibition of interleukin 6 signalling and renal function: A Mendelian randomization study date: 2021-02-10 journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol DOI: 10.1111/bcp.14725 sha: 57e3aa40e8dda76c3af4ad078e40232b5186de02 doc_id: 19749 cord_uid: jufe05nr Inhibition of interleukin 6 (IL‐6) signalling has been proposed as a potential cardioprotective strategy for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), but the direct effects of IL‐6 inhibition on renal function are not known. A Mendelian randomization (MR) study was performed to investigate the association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL‐6 signalling with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), CKD and blood urea nitrogen (BUN). Inverse‐variance weighted MR was used as the main analysis, with sensitivity analyses performed using simple median, weighted median and MR‐Egger methods. There was no evidence for an association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL‐6 signalling (scaled per standard deviation unit decrease in C‐reactive protein) with log eGFR (0.001, 95% confidence interval −0.004‐0.007), BUN (0.009, 95% confidence interval −0.003‐0.021) and CKD (odds ratio 0.948, 95% confidence interval 0.822‐1.094). These findings do not raise concerns for IL‐6 signalling having large adverse effects on renal function. Inhibition of interleukin 6 (IL-6) signalling has been proposed as a potential cardioprotective strategy for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), but the direct effects of IL-6 inhibition on renal function are not known. A Mendelian randomization (MR) study was performed to investigate the association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), CKD and blood urea nitrogen (BUN). Inverse-variance weighted MR was used as the main analysis, with sensitivity analyses performed using simple median, weighted median and MR-Egger methods. There was no evidence for an association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling (scaled per standard deviation unit decrease in C-reactive protein) with log eGFR (0.001, 95% confidence interval −0.004-0.007), BUN (0.009, 95% confidence interval −0.003-0.021) and CKD (odds ratio 0.948, 95% confidence interval 0.822-1.094). These findings do not raise concerns for IL-6 signalling having large adverse effects on renal function. 1 This suggests that alternative pathways may be implicated in the disproportionately high CVD risk in patients with declining renal function. 2 CKD is recognized as a low-grade but persistent inflammatory state, with raised levels of inflammatory biomarkers such as interleukin-1β (IL-1β), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP). 3 Inflammation plays a critical role in atherosclerosis and it is possible that the inflammatory milieu of CKD contributes to the excessive risk of CVD in CKD. 4, 5 Inflammatory markers including high-sensitive CRP and IL-6 are predictive of cardiovascular events and IL-6 levels are independent predictors of CVD and mortality in patients with CKD. 6, 7 Pharmacological inhibition of IL-1β by the monoclonal antibody canakinumab has reduced rates of major cardiovascular events in patients with CKD who had a previous myocardial infarction. 8 Further analysis of canakinumab showed that the cardioprotective effect was dependent on inhibition of IL-6 levels in a general population. 9 There are now ongoing plans to commence trials of the IL-6 signalling inhibitor ziltivekimab for reduction of CVD in patients with CKD. 10 However, it David K Ryan. No human participants participated in the study directly. This study involved secondary analysis of publicly available genome-wide association studies. has not been established whether or not direct IL-6 signalling inhibition has an impact on renal function. Mendelian randomization (MR) employs genetic polymorphisms as instrumental variables to study the effect of an exposure on an outcome. 11 MR is less susceptible to confounding due to the random allocation of genetic variants and balancing of environmental factors at conception. For a valid MR study, the following assumptions must hold: the genetic proxy must be associated with the exposure, the genetic variant only affects the outcome through the exposure of interest with no horizontal pleiotropic effect and the genetic variant is not associated with any known confounder affecting the exposure and the outcome. 11 A valid MR study is analogous to an endogenous randomized controlled trial based on the randomization of genetic variants at conception. Applied to drug development, MR provides an in silico platform to predict adverse drug consequences, explore drug repurposing and determine whether or not new therapeutic strategies are suitable to be trialled among vulnerable populations, such as patients with CKD. 12 Considering the growing interest in IL-6 inhibition in patients with CKD, the aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of inhibition of IL-6 signalling on renal function by MR methods. A two-sample MR study was conducted to investigate the association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling with different measures of renal function: estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), CKD and blood urea nitrogen (BUN). Two-sample refers to the fact that the instrument-exposure and instrument-outcome estimate are obtained from two different genome-wide association studies (GWAS), in this case serving to increase the statistical power of the MR study. Genetic variants for downregulated IL-6 signalling were selected as uncorrelated (r 2 < 0.1) single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) within 300 kB of the IL-6 receptor gene (IL6R, GRCh37/hg19 coordinates: chr1:154077669-154 741 926) that is associated with CRP in the UK Biobank 12 (n = 337 199, White British ancestry individuals) at genome-wide significance (P < 5E-8). CRP is a reliable downstream marker for IL-6 signalling and thus variants in the IL6R gene which associate with CRP levels represent proxies for IL-6 signalling modulation. To further investigate the validity of the selected variants, we measured the Pearson coefficient for the correlation between their association with CRP and other markers of IL-6 signalling, IL6R and serum IL-6 levels, obtained from an independent GWAS. 13 The variance in CRP levels explained by the genetic variants, R 2 , was calculated using the formula: Summary GWAS data from the Chronic Kidney Disease Genetics (CKDGen) Consortium European ancestry meta-analyses were used to obtain genetic association estimates for the primary outcomes of log eGFR, BUN and CKD (Table 1 ). 14 There are no overlapping populations between the exposure and outcome GWAS. In the original study, log eGFR was calculated using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation in adults and using the Schwartz formula for participants who were 18 years or younger. CKD was constructed as a binary outcome based on an eGFR < 60 mL min −1 per 1.73 m 2 . BUN was calculated as 2.8 × blood urea (mg/dL). Power was calculated using an online tool (https:// shiny.cnsgenomics.com/mRnd) to estimate the minimum and maximum effects that we had 80% statistical power to detect. Data for the exposure and outcome were harmonized according to the effect allele and no exclusions were made for palindromic variants. Individual MR estimates were calculated using the Wald ratio. Heterogeneity was assessed using Cochran's Q statistic and to account for heterogeneity a random-effects inverse-variance weighted method was used for the primary MR analysis. To explore potential pleiotropy, we conducted sensitivity analyses using the simple median, weighted median and MR-Egger methods. The median methods are robust if less than 50% of the contribution to the MR estimates comes from invalid instrumental variables. 15 with the exposure. 15 The estimated MR-Egger intercept is indicative of the average pleiotropic effect of the variants used. 15 We tested for such pleiotropy by assessing whether our intercept was significantly different from zero. 15 Results are presented as effect estimates and corresponding 95% confidence intervals per standard deviation decrease in CRP levels. For eGFR and BUN, respectively, estimates represent the change in log eGFR or blood urea nitrogen, and for CKD the results are expressed as odds ratio for CKD. All data analyses What is already known about this subject • Inhibition of interleukin 6 (IL-6) signalling has shown promising potential for lowering cardiovascular risk. • Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have a high burden of cardiovascular disease, likely mediated in part due to a low-grade and persistent inflammatory state. • There is growing interest in using IL-6 inhibitors to reduce cardiovascular risk in patients with CKD. • This Mendelian randomization study did not identify evidence to support the association of genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling with changes in renal function. • Adverse effects on renal function directly related to IL-6 inhibition are unlikely to limit this therapeutic strategy for reducing cardiovascular disease risk in patients with CKD. were performed using "TwoSampleMR" package version 4.26 in R statistical software. In further sensitivity analysis, we repeated our analysis using a different set of instrumental variables that have been used in a previous study to proxy IL-6 signalling inhibition. 16 These variants were selected based on associations with CRP (P < 5E-8, clumped at Thirty SNPs were used as instrumental variables to represent genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling ( Table 2 ). The F-statistic for the genetic exposure associations ranged between 40.28 and 1713.82 (median 98.0), indicating strong associations between the IL6-R variants and CRP level ( Table 2 ). The genetic association with CRP in the UK Biobank showed a high degree of correlation with other markers of IL-6 signalling: IL6R (r = −0.90, P = 1.75E-11) and serum IL-6 levels (r = −0.80, P = 6.2E-4, Appendix 1). In the main analysis, there was no strong evidence for an associa- This MR study did not identify evidence to show that genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling has an effect on renal function. IL-6 inhibitors such as tocilizumab are currently licenced for use in rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile arthritis and more recently have been under investigation for treatment of excessive inflammation in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection. 18 Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is an inflammatory disorder and both MR studies and randomized controlled trials suggest that inhibition of IL-6 signalling reduces risk of cardiovascular outcomes and thromboembolic events. 16, 19 Given the disproportionate burden of cardiovascular disease in patients with CKD and the inflammatory nature of both these conditions, there is growing interest in repurposing IL-6 inhibitors to treat CVD in CKD. 10 Our current findings support pharmacological IL-6 inhibition being unlikely to have a direct adverse effect on renal function. The findings of this MR study are in line with an earlier study of renal function in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and renal insufficiency receiving tocilizumab therapy. 20 However, this observational study is small (120 participants), had large numbers of patient stopping or switching therapy (60% switching biological therapy) and may be susceptible to confounding factors (patients receiving IL-6 inhibition were older and had rheumatoid arthritis for longer). 20 More recently, the Il-1β inhibitor canakinumab, which also inhibits IL-6, was trialled in patients with CKD and showed no effect on renal function in terms of serial eGFR, creatinine and urinary albumin-creatinine ratio. 8 The present MR study adds support to the initial pharmacovigilance surveys, and further is less prone to confounding and reverse causation. Table 2 shows the summary data for the variants that proxy IL-6 signalling inhibition. SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism. Beta is the standard deviation unit change in CRP (4.35 mg/L) per copy increment in the effect allele. R 2 represents the variance in CRP explained by the respective genetic variant. The F-statistic measures the strength of the instrumental variable with the exposure. In an additive model assuming independent variants, these instrumental variables explain 0.0138 of the variance in the exposure. Our results were robust to sensitivity analysis where different SNPs to proxy IL-6 signalling inhibition were selected from an independent GWAS. Furthermore, the consistency of our results across different MR methods and different measurements of renal dysfunction further substantiates the null findings. Our study also has limitations. The analysis for eGFR was wellpowered and it is unlikely that the null finding for eGFR represents a type II error for a clinically relevant effect. There was less power to detect small differences for BUN and CKD due to the smaller number of participants or cases, respectively, in the GWAS. It is important to interpret our findings within the context of an MR study, which considers genetically proxied inhibition of IL-6 signalling, rather than the effect of a discrete clinical intervention. Our approach looks at IL-6 signalling in isolation, and it is possible that pharmacological IL-6 inhibitors could have off-target effects (aside from IL-6R signalling) on other renal or extrarenal pathways which may ameliorate or exacerbate renal function indirectly. There is also the possibility of drug-drug interactions that cannot be accounted for in the present MR analysis. In conclusion, this study is consistent with the hypothesis that inhibition of IL-6 signalling does not directly affect renal function, supporting this approach as a therapeutic opportunity for reducing the risk of CVD in patients with CKD. All data used in this study are publicly available. The statistical code used in this work is available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request. David K. Ryan https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1264-7165 APP E NDIX 1 : Genetic association estimates for variants proxying the effect of IL-6 inhibition Genetic proxies for interleukin 6 (IL-6) inhibition selected on basis of their association with C-reactive protein (CRP), and the corresponding asso- Pearson correlations: • Correlation between CRP and IL6R association: r = −0.90, P = 1.8E-11 • Correlation between CRP and IL-6 association: r = −0.80, P = 6.2E-4 Table showing the association between SNPs and CRP, IL-6 receptor and serum IL-6 level. SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism. Beta is the standard deviation unit change in CRP, IL-6 alpha subunit or IL-6 level per copy increment in the effect allele. The association between individual variants and CRP was established in the UK Biobank. Associations between individual variants and IL-6 receptor and serum IL-6 were obtained from the INTERVAL study 13 as made publicly available through the PhenoScanner database. 23 Forest plots showing the Mendelian randomization estimates for chronic kidney disease (CKD), log eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate) and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) with different analysis methods (simple median, weighted median, inverse-variance weighted, MR-Egger). eGFR and BUN are presented as causal estimates with 95% confidence interval. CKD is described as the odds ratio (95% confidence interval) of having CKD with genetically proxied IL-6 signalling inhibition. Traditional cardiovascular disease risk factors in dialysis patients compared with the general population: the CHOICE Study Cardiovascular disease in chronic kidney disease. 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