Immune cell phenotype in endometrial cancer: from biological significance to clinical utility using Mendelian randomisation analysis

Lingfang Ye & Qianya Lin et al. · 2025-08-07

We investigated the relationship between immune cells and endometrial cancer by conducting a two-sample bidirectional Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis. MR uses genetic variation as an instrumental variable to study the causal effects of exposure on observed data outcomes. We conducted a dual-sample MR analysis to investigate the causal relationship between 731 immune cell phenotypes and endometrial cancer (EC). The weighted-median method and inverse variance weighted method MR were mainly used, and the The forward MR analysis revealed a causal relationship between EC and eight immune-cell phenotypes. The reverse MR analysis identified two immune-cell phenotypes with a potential causal effect on EC, with additional subtype-specific associations observed for endometrioid and non-endometrioid histology. Our study demonstrated a causal relationship between immune cells and EC, thereby providing guidance for the development of future immunoregulatory therapeutic strategies.
TL;DR

The findings suggest that the immune system and endometrial cancer affect each other in complex ways, which may help guide future research and lead to new treatments that target the immune system to better manage or prevent this type of cancer.

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Authors
Lingfang Ye, Beilei Chen, Meng Cen, Qianya Lin