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Maternal caffeine consumption during pregnancy and offspring cord blood DNA methylation: an epigenome-wide association study meta-analysis.

Laura SchellhasGiulietta S MonassoJanine F FelixVincent W V JaddoePeiyuan HuangSílvia Fernández-BarrésMartine VrijheidGiancarlo PesceIsabella Annesi-MaesanoChristian Magnus PageAnne-Lise BrantsæterMona BekkhusSiri Eldevik HåbergStephanie J LondonMarcus R MunafoLuisa ZuccoloGemma C Sharp
Published in: Epigenomics (2023)
Background: Prenatal caffeine exposure may influence offspring health via DNA methylation, but no large studies have tested this. Materials & methods: Epigenome-wide association studies and differentially methylated regions in cord blood (450k or EPIC Illumina arrays) were meta-analyzed across six European cohorts (n = 3725). Differential methylation related to self-reported caffeine intake (mg/day) from coffee, tea and cola was compared with assess whether caffeine is driving effects. Results: One CpG site (cg19370043, PRRX1 ) was associated with caffeine and another (cg14591243, STAG1 ) with cola intake. A total of 12-22 differentially methylated regions were detected with limited overlap across caffeinated beverages. Conclusion: We found little evidence to support an intrauterine effect of caffeine on offspring DNA methylation. Statistical power limitations may have impacted our findings.
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