Chinese Journal of Tissue Engineering Research ›› 2026, Vol. 30 ›› Issue (17): 4548-4556.doi: 10.12307/2026.110

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Genetic structure of co-morbidity between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis: a genome-wide association analysis

Han Jie1, Yao Guojun2, Huang Yebao3, Xu Zhiwei1, Shao Weigang1, Shang Kebin2, Wu Yachao2, Liao Zhen2   

  1. 1Master of Traditional Chinese Medicine Hall, Ruikang Hospital Affiliated to Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, Nanning 530011, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China; 2Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, Nanning 530001, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China; 3Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine Proctology, Liuzhou People’s Hospital, Liuzhou 545006, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China
  • Received:2025-03-19 Accepted:2025-06-07 Online:2026-06-18 Published:2025-12-05
  • Contact: Han Jie, Master of Traditional Chinese Medicine Hall, Ruikang Hospital Affiliated to Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, Nanning 530011, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China
  • About author:Han Jie, PhD, Professor, Chief physician, Doctoral supervisor, Master’s supervisor, Master of Traditional Chinese Medicine Hall, Ruikang Hospital Affiliated to Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, Nanning 530011, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China
  • Supported by:
    Pilot Project of Guangxi High-level Key Discipline Construction of Traditional Chinese Medicine, No. [2023]13 (to HJ); Guangxi Key Research Laboratory of Traditional Chinese Medicine, No. [2023]9 (to HJ); Guangxi Young Qihuang Scholars Cultivation Project, No. [2022]13 (to HJ); “Qihuang Engineering” High-level Talent Team Cultivation Project of Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, No. 202413 (to HJ); 2023 University-level Doctoral Research Innovation Project of Guangxi University of Chinese Medicine, No. YCBXJ2023022 (to XZW) 

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Frailty and rheumatoid arthritis are both chronic diseases that seriously impact health. With the accelerating aging population in China, the prevalence of chronic diseases such as frailty and rheumatoid arthritis continues to rise. Existing studies have suggested an association between the two, but their shared genetic basis is still unclear. Therefore, further in-depth exploration of the comorbid genetic structure of frailty and rheumatoid arthritis is necessary to provide insights into co-morbid prevention and treatment of the two diseases.
OBJECTIVE: To explore the possible shared genetic structure and potential biological links between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis, and to provide a scientific basis for co-morbidity prevention and treatment.
METHODS: We utilized whole-genome sequencing data for frailty from the GWAS Catalog database and rheumatoid arthritis data from the FinnGen R11. Linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis, Bayesian analysis, and stratified linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis were employed to assess the genetic correlation between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis. Multi-trait analysis and cross-trait meta-analysis were used to identify shared risk single nucleotide polymorphisms. Gene and gene-set association analysis tools and stratified linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis were applied for tissue-specific enrichment analysis. Finally, two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis based on generalized summary data was conducted to investigate potential bidirectional causal relationships between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: Frailty and rheumatoid arthritis exhibited significant positive genetic correlation (rg=0.28, P=4.54×10-35), particularly in specific loci at 6p21.32-21.33 (chr6:31571218-33236497). Through integrating multiple analytical methods, we successfully identified four single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs111294540, rs560607175, rs9277362, rs144112342) that shared risk between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis, located in the HLA-DQA1, HLA-DPA1, and TAP2 genes. Functional element analysis revealed 12 significant elements associated with both frailty and rheumatoid arthritis. Combined with gene expression data, tissue-specific enrichment analysis showed that single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with both frailty and rheumatoid arthritis were specifically enriched in the spleen. Furthermore, Mendelian randomization validated the bidirectional causal relationship between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis. This study elucidated the shared genetic basis between frailty and rheumatoid arthritis, revealing significant genetic correlation and common risk genes for both diseases, and validating their bidirectional causal relationship. These findings provide a reference for the future exploration of the comorbidity mechanisms and therapeutic targets for the two conditions. Although this research utilized data from European populations, it holds valuable implications for the prevention and treatment of chronic diseases in the context of the increasingly aging population in China.


Key words: rheumatoid arthritis, frailty, genome-wide association study, shared genetic structure, co-morbidity mechanism, therapeutic target

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