Genetic analysis of selection bias in a natural experiment: Investigating in-utero famine effects on elevated body mass index in the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study.
Jiayi ZhouClaire E IndikThomas B KuipersChihua LiMichel G NivardCalen P RyanElliot M Tucker-DrobM Jazmin TaeubertShuang WangTian WangDalton ConleyBastiaan T HeijmansL H LumeyDaniel W BelskyPublished in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2023)
Natural-experiment designs that compare survivors of in-utero famine exposure to unaffected controls suggest that in-utero undernutrition predisposes to development of obesity. However, birth rates drop dramatically during famines. Selection bias could arise if factors that contribute to obesity also protect fertility and/or fetal survival under famine conditions. We investigated this hypothesis using genetic analysis of a famine-exposed birth cohort. We genotyped participants in the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study (DHWFS, N=950; 45% male), of whom 51% were exposed to the 1944-1945 Dutch Famine during gestation and 49% were their unexposed same-sex siblings or "time controls" born before or after the famine in the same hospitals. We computed body-mass index (BMI) polygenic indices (PGIs) in DHWFS participants and compared BMI PGIs between famine-exposed and control groups. Participants with higher polygenic risk had higher BMIs (Pearson r=0.42, p<0.001). However, differences between BMI PGIs of famine-exposed participants and controls were small and not statistically different from zero across specifications (Cohen's d=0.10, p>0.092). Our findings did not indicate selection bias, supporting the validity of the natural-experiment design within DHWFS. In summary, our study outlines a novel approach to explore the presence of selection bias in famine and other natural experiment studies.
Keyphrases
- early life
- body mass index
- weight gain
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- healthcare
- magnetic resonance imaging
- physical activity
- preterm infants
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- gestational age
- weight loss
- computed tomography
- pregnant women
- young adults
- magnetic resonance
- adipose tissue
- genome wide
- skeletal muscle
- diffusion weighted imaging