Genetic impact of blood C-reactive protein levels on chronic spinal & widespread pain

Eur Spine J. 2023 Jun;32(6):2078-2085. doi: 10.1007/s00586-023-07711-7. Epub 2023 Apr 17.

Abstract

Purpose: Causal mechanisms underlying systemic inflammation in spinal & widespread pain remain an intractable experimental challenge. Here we examined whether: (i) associations between blood C-reactive protein (CRP) and chronic back, neck/shoulder & widespread pain can be explained by shared underlying genetic variants; and (ii) higher CRP levels causally contribute to these conditions.

Methods: Using genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of chronic back, neck/shoulder & widespread pain (N = 6063-79,089 cases; N = 239,125 controls) and GWAS summary statistics for blood CRP (Pan-UK Biobank N = 400,094 & PAGE consortium N = 28,520), we employed cross-trait bivariate linkage disequilibrium score regression to determine genetic correlations (rG) between these chronic pain phenotypes and CRP levels (FDR < 5%). Latent causal variable (LCV) and generalised summary data-based Mendelian randomisation (GSMR) analyses examined putative causal associations between chronic pain & CRP (FDR < 5%).

Results: Higher CRP levels were genetically correlated with chronic back, neck/shoulder & widespread pain (rG range 0.26-0.36; P ≤ 8.07E-9; 3/6 trait pairs). Although genetic causal proportions (GCP) did not explain this finding (GCP range - 0.32-0.08; P ≥ 0.02), GSMR demonstrated putative causal effects of higher CRP levels contributing to each pain type (beta range 0.027-0.166; P ≤ 9.82E-03; 3 trait pairs) as well as neck/shoulder pain effects on CRP levels (beta [S.E.] 0.030 [0.021]; P = 6.97E-04).

Conclusion: This genetic evidence for higher CRP levels in chronic spinal (back, neck/shoulder) & widespread pain warrants further large-scale multimodal & prospective longitudinal studies to accelerate the identification of novel translational targets and more effective therapeutic strategies.

Keywords: C-reactive protein; Chronic pain; Genetic predisposition to disease; Genome-wide association study; Inflammation biomarkers; Musculoskeletal pain.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • C-Reactive Protein* / genetics
  • C-Reactive Protein* / metabolism
  • Chronic Pain* / genetics
  • Genome-Wide Association Study
  • Humans
  • Inflammation
  • Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
  • Prospective Studies

Substances

  • C-Reactive Protein
  • CRP protein, human