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Prenatal and prepubertal exposures to tobacco smoke in men may cause lower lung function in future offspring: a three-generational study using a causal modelling approach: a three-generation study using a causal modelling approach

Authors :
Accordini, Simone
Calciano, Lucia
Johannessen, Ane
Benediktsdóttir, Bryndis
Bertelsen, Randi Jacobsen
Bråbäck, Lennart
Dharmage, Shyamali C.
Forsberg, Bertil
Real, Francisco Gomez
Holloway, John
Holm, Mathias
Janson, Christer
Jõgi, Nils Oskar
Jögi, Rain
Malinovschi, Andrei
Marcon, Alessandro
Martínez-moratalla Rovira, Jesús
Sánchez-Ramos, José Luis
Schlunssen, Vivi
Torén, Kjell
Jarvis, Deborah
Svanes, Cecilie
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mechanistic research suggests that lifestyle and environmental factors impact respiratory health across generations by epigenetic changes transmitted through male germ cells. Evidence from studies on humans is very limited.We investigated multigeneration causal associations to estimate the causal effects of tobacco smoking on lung function within the paternal line. We analysed data from 383 adult offspring (age 18-47 years; 52.0% female) and their 274 fathers, who had participated in the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS)/Respiratory Health in Northern Europe, Spain and Australia (RHINESSA) generation study and had provided valid measures of pre-bronchodilator lung function. Two counterfactual-based, multilevel mediation models were developed with: paternal grandmothers' smoking in pregnancy and fathers' smoking initiation in prepuberty as exposures; fathers' forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC), or FEV1/FVC z-scores as potential mediators (proxies of unobserved biological mechanisms that are true mediators); and offspring's FEV1 and FVC, or FEV1/FVC z-scores as outcomes. All effects were summarised as differences (Δ) in expected z-scores related to fathers' and grandmothers' smoking history.Fathers' smoking initiation in prepuberty had a negative direct effect on both offspring's FEV1 (Δz-score -0.36, 95% CI -0.63- -0.10) and FVC (-0.50, 95% CI -0.80- -0.20) compared with fathers' never smoking. Paternal grandmothers' smoking in pregnancy had a negative direct effect on fathers' FEV1/FVC (-0.57, 95% CI -1.09- -0.05) and a negative indirect effect on offspring's FEV1/FVC (-0.12, 95% CI -0.21- -0.03) compared with grandmothers' not smoking before fathers' birth nor during fathers' childhood.Fathers' smoking in prepuberty and paternal grandmothers' smoking in pregnancy may cause lower lung function in offspring. Our results support the concept that lifestyle-related exposures during these susceptibility periods influence the health of future generations.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......348..c7c07b6b59d58d810a309bb3de0007ed