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Opioid medication use and blood DNA methylation: epigenome-wide association meta-analysis.

Mi Kyeong LeeRoby JoehanesDaniel L McCartneyMinjung KhoAnke HülsAnnah B WyssChunyu LiuRosie M WalkerSharon L R KardiaThomas S WingoAdam BurkholderJiantao MaArchie CampbellAliza P WingoTianxiao HuanSinjini SikdarAmena KeshawarzDavid A BennettJennifer A SmithKathryn L EvansDaniel LevyStephanie J London
Published in: Epigenomics (2023)
Aim: To identify differential methylation related to prescribed opioid use. Methods: This study examined whether blood DNA methylation, measured using Illumina arrays, differs by recent opioid medication use in four population-based cohorts. We meta-analyzed results (282 users; 10,560 nonusers) using inverse-variance weighting. Results: Differential methylation (false discovery rate <0.05) was observed at six CpGs annotated to the following genes: KIAA0226 , CPLX2 , TDRP , RNF38 , TTC23 and GPR179 . Integrative epigenomic analyses linked implicated loci to regulatory elements in blood and/or brain. Additionally, 74 CpGs were differentially methylated in males or females. Methylation at significant CpGs correlated with gene expression in blood and/or brain. Conclusion: This study identified DNA methylation related to opioid medication use in general populations. The results could inform the development of blood methylation biomarkers of opioid use.
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