Analyses of child cardiometabolic phenotype following assisted reproductive technologies using a pragmatic trial emulation approach

Author:

Huang Jonathan YinhaoORCID,Cai Shirong,Huang ZhongweiORCID,Tint Mya ThwayORCID,Yuan Wen Lun,Aris Izzuddin M.ORCID,Godfrey Keith M.ORCID,Karnani NeerjaORCID,Lee Yung Seng,Chan Jerry Kok Yen,Chong Yap Seng,Eriksson Johan Gunnar,Chan Shiao-YngORCID

Abstract

AbstractAssisted reproductive technologies (ART) are increasingly used, however little is known about the long-term health of ART-conceived offspring. Weak selection of comparison groups and poorly characterized mechanisms impede current understanding. In a prospective cohort (Growing Up in Singapore Towards healthy Outcomes; GUSTO; Clinical Trials ID: NCT01174875) including 83 ART-conceived and 1095 spontaneously-conceived singletons, we estimate effects of ART on anthropometry, blood pressure, serum metabolic biomarkers, and cord tissue DNA methylation by emulating a pragmatic trial supported by machine learning-based estimators. We find ART-conceived children to be shorter (−0.5 SD [95% CI: −0.7, −0.2]), lighter (−0.6 SD [−0.9, −0.3]) and have lower skinfold thicknesses (e.g. −14% [−24%, −3%] suprailiac), and blood pressure (−3 mmHg [−6, −0.5] systolic) at 6-6.5 years, with no strong differences in metabolic biomarkers. Differences are not explained by parental anthropometry or comorbidities, polygenic risk score, breastfeeding, or illnesses. Our simulations demonstrate ART is strongly associated with lower NECAB3 DNA methylation, with negative control analyses suggesting these estimates are unbiased. However, methylation changes do not appear to mediate observed differences in child phenotype.

Funder

MOH | National Medical Research Council

RCUK | Medical Research Council

DH | National Institute for Health Research

EC | Erasmus+

British Heart Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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