Abstract
Aim: To assess associations of early exposure to hunger with depressive symptoms and cardiovascular disease (CVD) and to investigate possible epigenetic pathways. Patients & methods: Data were based on a German population-based cohort of older adults (n = 9631). Regression models were performed for health outcomes in later life. An epigenome-wide association study for early-life exposure to hunger was performed in a subgroup (n = 2221) with whole blood DNA methylation data. Results: Childhood exposure to hunger was associated with CVD and depressive symptoms in later life. Prenatal or infant exposure was strongly associated with depressive symptoms. No CpG reached epigenome-wide significance after multiple testing correction. Conclusion: Childhood hunger is a risk factor for depressive symptoms and CVD at older age. DNA methylation could not explain this association.
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Perna, L., Zhang, Y., Wild, B., Kliegel, M., Ihle, A., Schöttker, B., … Brenner, H. (2020). Childhood exposure to hunger: Associations with health outcomes in later life and epigenetic markers. Epigenomics, 12(21), 1861–1870. https://doi.org/10.2217/epi-2019-0333
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