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High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes

BACKGROUND: High-dimensional mediation analysis is an extension of unidimensional mediation analysis that includes multiple mediators, and increasingly it is being used to evaluate the indirect omics-layer effects of environmental exposures on health outcomes. Analyses involving high-dimensional med...

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Autores principales: Jumentier, Basile, Barrot, Claire-Cécile, Estavoyer, Maxime, Tost, Jorg, Heude, Barbara, François, Olivier, Lepeule, Johanna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Environmental Health Perspectives 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10104171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37058433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP11559
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author Jumentier, Basile
Barrot, Claire-Cécile
Estavoyer, Maxime
Tost, Jorg
Heude, Barbara
François, Olivier
Lepeule, Johanna
author_facet Jumentier, Basile
Barrot, Claire-Cécile
Estavoyer, Maxime
Tost, Jorg
Heude, Barbara
François, Olivier
Lepeule, Johanna
author_sort Jumentier, Basile
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: High-dimensional mediation analysis is an extension of unidimensional mediation analysis that includes multiple mediators, and increasingly it is being used to evaluate the indirect omics-layer effects of environmental exposures on health outcomes. Analyses involving high-dimensional mediators raise several statistical issues. Although many methods have recently been developed, no consensus has been reached about the optimal combination of approaches to high-dimensional mediation analyses. OBJECTIVES: We developed and validated a method for high-dimensional mediation analysis (HDMAX2) and applied it to evaluate the causal role of placental DNA methylation in the pathway between exposure to maternal smoking (MS) during pregnancy and gestational age (GA) and birth weight of the baby at birth. METHODS: HDMAX2 combines latent factor regression models for epigenome-wide association studies with [Formula: see text] tests for mediation and considers CpGs and aggregated mediator regions (AMRs). HDMAX2 was carefully evaluated using simulated data and compared to state-of-the-art multidimensional epigenetic mediation methods. Then, HDMAX2 was applied to data from 470 women of the Etude des Déterminants pré et postnatals du développement de la santé de l’Enfant (EDEN) cohort. RESULTS: HDMAX2 demonstrated increased power in comparison with state-of-the-art multidimensional mediation methods and identified several AMRs not identified in previous mediation analyses of exposure to MS on birth weight and GA. The results provided evidence for a polygenic architecture of the mediation pathway with a posterior estimate of the overall indirect effect of CpGs and AMRs equal to [Formula: see text] lower birth weight representing 32.1% of the total effect [standard deviation [Formula: see text]]. HDMAX2 also identified AMRs having simultaneous effects both on GA and on birth weight. Among the top hits of both GA and birth weight analyses, regions located in COASY, BLCAP, and ESRP2 also mediated the relationship between GA and birth weight, suggesting reverse causality in the relationship between GA and the methylome. DISCUSSION: HDMAX2 outperformed existing approaches and revealed an unsuspected complexity of the potential causal relationships between exposure to MS and birth weight at the epigenome-wide level. HDMAX2 is applicable to a wide range of tissues and omic layers. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP11559
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spelling pubmed-101041712023-04-15 High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes Jumentier, Basile Barrot, Claire-Cécile Estavoyer, Maxime Tost, Jorg Heude, Barbara François, Olivier Lepeule, Johanna Environ Health Perspect Research BACKGROUND: High-dimensional mediation analysis is an extension of unidimensional mediation analysis that includes multiple mediators, and increasingly it is being used to evaluate the indirect omics-layer effects of environmental exposures on health outcomes. Analyses involving high-dimensional mediators raise several statistical issues. Although many methods have recently been developed, no consensus has been reached about the optimal combination of approaches to high-dimensional mediation analyses. OBJECTIVES: We developed and validated a method for high-dimensional mediation analysis (HDMAX2) and applied it to evaluate the causal role of placental DNA methylation in the pathway between exposure to maternal smoking (MS) during pregnancy and gestational age (GA) and birth weight of the baby at birth. METHODS: HDMAX2 combines latent factor regression models for epigenome-wide association studies with [Formula: see text] tests for mediation and considers CpGs and aggregated mediator regions (AMRs). HDMAX2 was carefully evaluated using simulated data and compared to state-of-the-art multidimensional epigenetic mediation methods. Then, HDMAX2 was applied to data from 470 women of the Etude des Déterminants pré et postnatals du développement de la santé de l’Enfant (EDEN) cohort. RESULTS: HDMAX2 demonstrated increased power in comparison with state-of-the-art multidimensional mediation methods and identified several AMRs not identified in previous mediation analyses of exposure to MS on birth weight and GA. The results provided evidence for a polygenic architecture of the mediation pathway with a posterior estimate of the overall indirect effect of CpGs and AMRs equal to [Formula: see text] lower birth weight representing 32.1% of the total effect [standard deviation [Formula: see text]]. HDMAX2 also identified AMRs having simultaneous effects both on GA and on birth weight. Among the top hits of both GA and birth weight analyses, regions located in COASY, BLCAP, and ESRP2 also mediated the relationship between GA and birth weight, suggesting reverse causality in the relationship between GA and the methylome. DISCUSSION: HDMAX2 outperformed existing approaches and revealed an unsuspected complexity of the potential causal relationships between exposure to MS and birth weight at the epigenome-wide level. HDMAX2 is applicable to a wide range of tissues and omic layers. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP11559 Environmental Health Perspectives 2023-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10104171/ /pubmed/37058433 http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP11559 Text en https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/about-ehp/licenseEHP is an open-access journal published with support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health. All content is public domain unless otherwise noted.
spellingShingle Research
Jumentier, Basile
Barrot, Claire-Cécile
Estavoyer, Maxime
Tost, Jorg
Heude, Barbara
François, Olivier
Lepeule, Johanna
High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title_full High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title_fullStr High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title_short High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis: A New Method Applied to Maternal Smoking, Placental DNA Methylation, and Birth Outcomes
title_sort high-dimensional mediation analysis: a new method applied to maternal smoking, placental dna methylation, and birth outcomes
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10104171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37058433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP11559
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