Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T15:40:54.092Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Relationships between the maternal prenatal diet and epigenetic state in infants: a systematic review of human studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 July 2023

Kathya K. Fernando
Affiliation:
Department of Immunology & Pathology, Alfred Health and Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
Jeffrey M. Craig*
Affiliation:
Epigenetics, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Royal Children’s Hospital, Parkville, Australia IMPACT – the Institute for Mental and Physical Health and Clinical Translation, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, Australia
Samantha L. Dawson
Affiliation:
Epigenetics, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Royal Children’s Hospital, Parkville, Australia IMPACT – the Institute for Mental and Physical Health and Clinical Translation, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, Australia
*
Corresponding author: J. M. Craig; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Most human studies investigating the relationship between maternal diet in pregnancy and infant epigenetic state have focused on macro- and micro-nutrient intake, rather than the whole diet. This makes it difficult to translate the evidence into practical prenatal dietary recommendations.

To review the evidence on how the prenatal diet relates to the epigenetic state of infants measured in the first year of life via candidate gene or genome-wide approaches.

Following the PRISMA guidelines, this systematic literature search was completed in August 2020, and updated in August 2021 and April 2022. Studies investigating dietary supplementation were excluded. Risk of bias was assessed, and the certainty of results was analysed with consideration of study quality and validity.

Seven studies were included, encompassing 6852 mother-infant dyads. One study was a randomised controlled trial and the remaining six were observational studies. There was heterogeneity in dietary exposure measures. Three studies used an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) design and four focused on candidate genes from cord blood samples. All studies showed inconsistent associations between maternal dietary measures and DNA methylation in infants. Effect sizes of maternal diet on DNA methylation ranged from very low (< 1%) to high (> 10%). All studies had limitations and were assessed as having moderate to high risk of bias.

The evidence presented here provides very low certainty that dietary patterns in pregnancy relate to epigenetic state in infants. We recommend that future studies maximise sample sizes and optimise and harmonise methods of dietary measurement and pipelines of epigenetic analysis.

Type
Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with International Society for Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

Introduction

The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis contends that environmental factors, such as maternal nutrition, stress and infection, during fetal development can influence the short and long-term health and non-communicable disease (NCD) status in offspring. Reference Barker1,Reference Gluckman, Hanson, Cooper and Thornburg2

Experimental animal studies support the DOHaD hypothesis Reference McMullen and Mostyn3 and the role of maternal nutrition. Reference Albert, Vickers and Gray4Reference Vucetic, Kimmel, Totoki, Hollenbeck and Reyes7 Pre-clinical studies have shown that components of maternal nutrition such as fat intake (e.g., fish oil and omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (omega-3 PUFA)) can affect gene expression, body weight, glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity in offspring. Reference Albert, Vickers and Gray4Reference Vucetic, Kimmel, Totoki, Hollenbeck and Reyes7 However, evidence in humans is limited and mainly in the form of observational studies. Reference Mandy and Nyirenda8

One of the proposed DOHaD mechanisms is via alteration in gene expression through epigenetic modification. Reference Gluckman, Hanson, Cooper and Thornburg2 Epigenetics describes the molecular mechanisms that control gene activity without changing the DNA sequence. Reference Cavalli and Heard9 During early development, differentiation is accompanied by changes in epigenetic state, which are inherited when cells divide, thus acting as cellular memory. Epigenetic state is controlled by a combination of stochastic, genetic and environmental factors, the latter including internal, such as hormone signalling, and external, such as nutrition. Epigenetic modifications include DNA methylation, histone modification and non-coding RNA, which together, regulate gene activity. The most widely studied form of epigenetic modification is DNA methylation, specifically at the cytosine of a cytosine-guanine (CpG) dinucleotide. Microarray and sequence-based DNA methylation profiling are two technologies that are broadly used to study methylation status. The way in which methylation status is differentiated can be via restriction enzyme digestion, methyl-binding antibodies or proteins or through bisulphite conversion of genomic DNA. Reference Bibikova and Fan10

Diet can influence epigenetics via the one-carbon metabolism pathway which is one of the main metabolic networks allowing nutrients to modulate DNA methylation. Reference Amenyah, Hughes and Ward11 On this basis, many studies have investigated the relationships between folate supplementation and DNA methylation (reviewed by). Reference Anderson, Sant and Dolinoy12 However, more broadly, dietary intake of folate, choline, betaine, methionine and B group vitamins have been implicated in global methylation and methylation in promoters of disease-specific genes in both animal and human studies. Reference Anderson, Sant and Dolinoy12

A small number of animal studies have examined the relationship between macronutrients in maternal diet during pregnancy and epigenetic state in offspring. Reference Gong, Pan and Chen13,Reference Lillycrop, Phillips, Jackson, Hanson and Burdge14 Rodent studies have focused on the effects of supplementation with vitamins such as folic acid, protein and fat on DNA methylation levels in fetal to pre-weaning stages. Evidence from rat models indicate that protein restriction throughout pregnancy results in either global or locus-specific changes in DNA methylation. Reference Lillycrop, Slater-Jefferies, Hanson, Godfrey, Jackson and Burdge15 Furthermore, a study of methyl-deficient rats in prenatal, postnatal and dietary transition periods suggested that responsiveness of the nutritional change is tissue specific. Reference Zhang16

Two systematic reviews have investigated the relationship in humans between prenatal maternal dietary supplements and DNA methylation in newborns. Reference Geraghty, Lindsay, Alberdi, McAuliffe and Gibney17,Reference Andraos, de Seymour, O’Sullivan and Kussmann18 The first review included eight human studies, three intervention studies that trialled folic acid supplementation and five which were observational. Reference Geraghty, Lindsay, Alberdi, McAuliffe and Gibney19 Studies were heterogeneous in design and included candidate and genome-wide approaches. Some studies identified folic acid supplements associated with differential methylation, Reference McKay, Groom and Potter20Reference Steegers-Theunissen, Obermann-Borst and Kremer22 while others did not. Reference Fryer, Nafee, Ismail, Carroll, Emes and Farrell23 An important finding was that in a folate-replete population, excess intake of folate is likely to impact global (genome average) DNA methylation in infants. Reference Geraghty, Lindsay, Alberdi, McAuliffe and Gibney17 The second systematic review identified that nutritional supplementation with vitamins and micronutrients during pregnancy had little effect on offspring DNA methylation unless the results were stratified by sex, BMI and prenatal smoking. Reference Andraos, de Seymour, O’Sullivan and Kussmann18 However, experimental approaches primarily based on candidate genes and global levels of DNA methylation, were heterogeneous in design and no consistent effects have been found. Reference Andraos, de Seymour, O’Sullivan and Kussmann24 The authors called for further studies investigating single versus multiple micronutrient supplementation.

In addition to dietary supplements, we propose that full dietary intake should be considered in studies investigating the effects of maternal nutrition on epigenetic state of offspring in humans. The disadvantages of investigating DNA methylation in relation to prenatal micro- and macro-nutrient intake are that this may not capture important interactions between foods, and it becomes difficult to translate the evidence to practical dietary recommendations for women to follow. Only by investigating dietary intake, or proxies for dietary intake, can the dietary consequences on the infant epigenome be assessed. Ultimately, such data could be linked with offspring health, and used to strengthen evidence for prenatal dietary recommendations. Equitable access to dietary supplements is not guaranteed in any country. Therefore, as a complement to the current evidence, an understanding of how diet influences DNA methylation in humans could help establish healthy dietary patterns that are easy to follow. This is particularly important given the present nutritional landscape, where more support is needed to help women meet the dietary recommendations. Reference Blumfield, Hure, Macdonald-Wicks, Smith and Collins25

Therefore, the aim of this systematic review is to synthesise current knowledge on how the maternal prenatal diet relates to the epigenetic state of infants. We aim to review the associations between specific dietary patterns in pregnancy and epigenetic state in infants, measured via candidate gene or genome-wide approaches. The results of this review will help to identify whether aspects of the prenatal diet or full dietary intake are associated with epigenetic state in offspring.

Methods

Search strategy

This systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. Reference Page, McKenzie and Bossuyt26 We performed a systematic literature search between July 2020 and August 2020 and performed a search update in August 2021, a final hand search was conducted in April 2022. The PubMed, CINAHL, Ovid MEDLINE and Embase databases were searched using a predefined, structured search strategy aiming to retrieve human studies investigating the maternal prenatal diet and maternal and offspring epigenetic regulation. The following five search groups were combined using an ‘and’ operator, (1) for diet: ‘food OR nutrition OR diet OR macronutrient OR nutrient OR Mediterranean diet OR vegetarian OR vegan OR omnivore OR restriction diet OR dietary pattern’; (2) for epigenetics: ‘epigenetic OR epigenome OR methylation OR histone OR noncoding RNA OR acyltransferase’; (3) for mothers: ‘mother OR maternal OR pregnant OR pregnancy OR motherhood OR perinatal’; (4) for infants: ‘progeny OR prenatal OR baby OR infant OR neonate OR neonatal OR offspring’; (5) for human studies: ‘randomized controlled trial OR RCT OR rct OR observational study OR cohort study OR case-control study’.

Study selection, inclusion and exclusion criteria

In this review, the chosen population was pregnant women where diet was measured as an exposure and epigenetic outcomes were measured in infants. Experimental studies comprising double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trials and observational studies comprising cohorts and longitudinal studies were included. These studies involved measurement of food intake through diet, dietary components or proxies for dietary components. The search was limited to human studies written in English. Studies were excluded if there was: use of nutritional supplementation interventions without a measurement of dietary intake; a lack of reporting of epigenetic outcomes for mother or infant; a lack of measurement or report of aspects of maternal dietary intake; or incorrect timeframe i.e. maternal diet prior to conception or epigenetic outcomes measured during toddler stages (from around one year of age) or later. Studies were screened for inclusion and exclusion by one author (KF), study eligibility was reviewed by all authors using Rayyan, Reference Ouzzani, Hammady, Fedorowicz and Elmagarmid27 and disagreements were resolved through discussion.

Data extraction

Two reviewers independently collected data from each study (KF & JC), these data were checked by KF, and any disagreements were resolved through discussion with all authors. No automation tools were used to collect or translate data. The following data were extracted: study design, study aim, setting, year, participant characteristics, the exposure conditions and duration, study primary and secondary outcomes, epigenetic outcome measure, analysis methods and technology, study results and model adjustments. We inferred the ‘primary’ and ‘secondary’ outcomes based on the study’s aim and design and when these were not explicitly stated in a study.

Critical appraisal assessment

We devised an assessment rubric to appraise the methodological quality and validity of the epigenetic data analysis methods used. This rubric evaluated design aspects such as the sample size, scale of epigenetic analysis, whether best-practice methods and results were reported, and whether the results were described fair and accurately in the abstract. This appraisal informed the evidence certainty assessment (GRADE) Reference Schünemann, Guyatt and Oxman28 for study limitations, imprecision and inconsistency.

Assessment of risk of bias/study quality

The risk of bias was assessed using the Jadad scale Reference Halpern and Douglas29 for randomised controlled trials and the quality of non-randomised trials was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Reference Wells, Shea and O’Connell30 The risk of bias or quality (as appropriate) in each study was classified as low, medium or high. Two authors (KF and SD) assessed the risk of bias independently and disagreements were resolved through discussion. Robvis was used to generate risk of bias plots. Reference McGuinness and Higgins31 Reporting bias was assessed with consideration of the results presented and magnitudes of effect.

Certainty assessment

GRADE Reference Schünemann, Guyatt and Oxman28 was used to assess the certainty of results for the association between specific dietary patterns in pregnancy and epigenetic state in infants (measured via candidate gene or genome-wide approaches) with consideration of the study quality and validity i.e. study limitations, imprecision, indirectness, consistency of effect and risk of bias.

Results

Study selection and study characteristics

Our search identified 771 records (Fig. 1); from these, 251 were excluded as duplicates and 520 were subjected to screening for eligibility. A total of 479 records were excluded as the titles were not relevant to either diet or epigenetics, focused on micronutrients and/or supplementation or were review articles. Abstracts of the remaining 41 articles were assessed for eligibility and 35 were excluded, leaving five eligible studies. Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 An updated search conducted 12 months after the initial search yielded no new studies. In 2022 April, two further articles were identified through hand-searching selected references, yielding a total of seven eligible studies for the systematic review Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 (Table 1). Only one study was a randomised controlled trial Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 ; the remaining six were observational studies, Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 one of which pooled DNA methylation data across five large birth cohorts. Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38

Figure 1. PRISMA flow diagram showing selection of included studies for this review.

Table 1. Study characteristics

NS, Not stated.

Exposure measures

There was considerable heterogeneity in dietary exposure measures. Three out of the seven studies used measures of fat intake; specifically, dietary omega-3 PUFA, Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 oily fish, Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 and fats Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 (Table 1). Three studies measured specific dietary patterns, a low glycaemic index Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 and the Mediterranean diet. Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 In another study, the exposure was maternal calorie intake. Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 Dietary intake measurement differed between studies and included food diaries, Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 food frequency questionnaires, Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 24-hour recall, Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 and biomarkers of omega-3 PUFA from maternal blood 12-24 hours prior to birth. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 The exposure duration varied, ranging from the time of study enrolment during gestation until completion of the second, Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 or third trimester. Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi39 In the large PACE consortium study, the exposure duration varied across the five cohorts. Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38

Outcome measures

None of the included studies reported methylation outcomes for mothers. Six of the seven studies reported infant DNA methylation as the primary (main) study outcome. Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 One study reported DNA methylation as a secondary outcome to child behavioural outcomes Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34 (Table 1). The scale of DNA methylation analysis differed between studies; three used an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) design conducted on 485,000 Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35,Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 and 850,000 Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 CpGs, while four studies focused on a small number (1-8) of candidate genes and their differentially-methylated CpGs (DMCpGs) or regions (DMRs). Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37

Secondary analyses were performed within some studies including replication analysis of top candidate genes derived from the primary EWAS; association of DNA methylation with gene expression and genetic polymorphisms Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 ; and association between fat intake and DNA methylation at the insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) differentially methylated region (DMR) and the H19-DMR, birth weight for gestational age and cord blood levels of IGF2 protein. Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37

Six studies used umbilical cord blood white blood cells (WBC) for the infant tissue sampled for epigenetic analysis, Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 and one used cell-free DNA extracted from cord blood serum. Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 DNA methylation was measured using either Illumina methylation arrays, Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32,Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 bisulphite pyrosequencing Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 or high-resolution melt analysis. Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33

Study results

All seven studies included in this review showed inconsistent associations between maternal dietary measures and DNA methylation in infants (Table 2). The effect sizes ranged from very low (<1%), Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 low (1%–5%), moderate (5%–10%), Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 to high (>10%) Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 and were not reported in one study. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35

Table 2. Epigenetic results

DMR, differentially methylated region; DMCpG, differentially methylated CpG; FDR, false discovery rate; ICR, imprinting control region.

Gene-specific studies

The C-MACH study reported lower DNA methylation in offspring of large effect sizes (Table 2) in the H19-DMR in offspring of mothers with low-calorie intake compared to those with medium and high-calorie intake, respectively. Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 The NEST study reported sex-dependent variations in methylation across six imprinted genes in offspring, varying as maternal adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern increased, albeit with very low effect sizes. The Project Viva study reported higher and lower methylation of moderate effect size within the IGF2 and H19 genes in offspring of mothers with exposures related to different types of fat. Only one of the four gene-specific studies adjusted for multiple testing. Three of the studies adjusted models for relevant covariates, e.g. infant sex or gestational age at delivery. Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 In the Isle of Wight 3rd Generation Cohort, FADS1/2 and ELOVL5 were selected from the methylation array data as candidate genes. It also reported higher and lower methylation of low/very low effect size in the FADS1/2 and ELOVL5 genes (respectively) in offspring of mothers with higher intake of oily fish.

Genome-wide studies

The ROLO RCT study reported higher methylation with a very low average effect size (Table 3) across all probes in offspring of mothers who consumed a low glycaemic index diet in comparison to the controls, and higher methylation with a low effect size for the same comparison in the 1000 probes ranked by p-value. The ‘Feeding fetus’ study did not provide the direction or effect size in DNA methylation in a region between the COX19 and ADAP1 genes in offspring of mothers with the highest tertile of intake of omega-3 PUFA compared to the lowest tertile. In the PACE consortium, one WNTB5B CpG had a significantly higher level of DNA methylation associated with maternal adherence to the Mediterranean diet. Of the four genome-wide studies, two adjusted for multiple testing and adjusted for relevant covariates, Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 while another used a ‘combined’ unadjusted method, Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 and another performed no model adjustment. Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36

Table 3. Assessment of epigenetic data analysis: methods, quality control

Key: ✓, performed, ∇, not performed; -, not clear; n/a, not applicable due to study design. Sample size classification (per group): <100, small; 100–1,000, moderate; 1000+, large. Effect size classification: <1%, very low; 1%–5%, low; 5%–10%, moderate; >10% large on a scale of 0-100% difference).

* Denotes an effect size that is not directly comparable as it reflects a ratio rather than exposed vs non-exposed.

Critical appraisal assessment

The methodological quality and validity of the epigenetic data analysis varied across studies (Table 3). The sample sizes were generally small (<100 per group) or moderate (100–1,000 per group). There was consistency in the sample tissue used, with all but one study Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 using DNA from cord blood WBC samples. However, these authors used cell-free DNA from cord blood, which is likely to have also originated from WBCs. As DNA methylation levels differ in part between tissues, this strengthens the quality of evidence in this systematic review. There was heterogeneity in the approach used for epigenetic analysis, which may explain the inconsistencies. For example, three studies used EWAS, Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32,Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 three studies used candidate genes and CpGs Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 and another study used both approaches. Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil40

Data quality control steps, such as removal of poor-performing samples, removal of probes hybridising to multiple genomic locations Reference Chen, Lemire and Choufani41,Reference Pidsley, Zotenko and Peters42 and normalisation across probes, were described in three out of six studies, leading to imprecision in the results (Table 3). Only the ‘Feeding fetus’ study did not provide the number of CpGs used following initial QC in EWAS analysis whereas it was provided consistently in the rest of the studies. Some studies did not adjust for potential confounders such as cellular heterogeneity, sex and age at delivery. Only the Isle of Wight 3rd Generation cohort study Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil40 investigated the influence of genetic influence on epigenetic state, which can also confound studies if genotypes are unevenly distributed between groups. Reference Lappalainen and Greally43 This added to the inconsistency and imprecision. There was also inconsistent use of the methods used to adjust for multiple testing, which weakens interpretation due to the higher likelihood of type 1 errors.

Both EWAS studies did not list the highest-ranking DMCpGs/DMRs along with their effect sizes and p-values. This information is essential to judge the strength of association and omission increases inconsistency and imprecision. None of the studies calculated the proportion of DMCpGs or DMRs at the stated level of significance as a proportion of all measured, something that would have enabled more accurate comparisons across studies and increased precision. Measuring test statistic inflation (lambda) is one way of monitoring the effects of confounding Reference Guintivano, Shabalin and Chan44 but was not measured in any of the studies. Validation of top-ranking DMCpGs/DMRs using an independent method of DNA methylation analysis, replication in an independent cohort and meta-analysis are methods to reduce type 1 errors and to maximise the likelihood of agreement across studies. However, the ROLO study Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 did attempt replication, although the original findings were not replicated.

Association of function to top-ranked DMCpGs/DMRs using enrichment analysis or analysis of protein and/or RNA levels can provide information about changes to gene function associated with change in DNA methylation. Two studies attempted this; in one, Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 the effect of fat intake was investigated on the gene expression in FADS1/2 and ELOVL5 and in Project Viva, Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 the protein levels of IGF2 and H19 were measured.

There was inconsistency and imprecision in the way the results were reported in the title or abstract. Some of the authors reported accurately Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 and the others over-stated their results. Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32,Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 In summary, we ranked half the studies as poor quality and half as good quality (Table 3). Low sample size, low effect size and missing details largely contributed to this conclusion.

Assessment of risk of bias

Assessment of risk of bias in randomised controlled trial

The RCT Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 scored two out of a maximum of five points where lower is indicative of greater bias in the Jadad scale Reference Halpern and Douglas29 (Fig. 2). D1 (study described as randomised) had low risk of bias, although randomisation was used in the main study, this sub-analysis selected 60 sex-matched participants (30 in each group), without providing details about the selection process or accounting for all participants. D3 (blinding mentioned) had high risk of bias as there was no mention of blinding, but this study was likely to be a single-blind RCT as participants would have become aware of group allocation when they attended the intervention education session. Moreover, it is unclear whether the investigators were aware of group allocation during the data analysis phase, which may have biased the results hence D4 (appropriate blinding mentioned) scored high risk of bias. D5 (accounted for all withdrawals and dropouts) was unclear.

Figure 2. Jadad scale for reporting randomised controlled trials.

Assessment of risk of bias in cohort studies

Representativeness of the selected sample

All cohort studies had a moderate quality scoring between five and seven out of a total of nine (Fig. 3). Scoring for D1 (representativeness of the exposed cohort) varied, Miyaso et al., Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 Chiu et al., Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 and Küpers et al. Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu 38 selected a subset of participants from their full cohorts for whom questionnaire data were complete, this impacted on representativeness of participant selection (D1) for Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33,Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 ; however, one study still scored one star due the use of five large population-based cohorts across five countries. Reference Küpers, Fernández-Barrés and Nounu38 In another study, Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 subsetting led to uncertainty around how representative the outcome is of the full cohort as outcome data were not included for 73% of the full study participants (D9-adequacy of follow-up of cohorts) Chiu et al also excluded participants due to gestational diabetes, unplanned pregnancy, delivery before 40 weeks or after 42 weeks, although this limits the representativeness of the sample (D1), the sample homogeneity may help to improve the precision of the results by limiting variation in DNA methylation due to other factors. Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 The ‘Feeding fetus’ study selected a non-representative subsample of the original population, excluding 84% of the sample (847/1000) due to smoking and health conditions. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 Unlike Miyaso et al., Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase45 this did not influence the scoring for D9 as Bianchi et al. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 explicitly investigated a healthy population, rather than excluding due to missing records. Similarly, Isle of Wight 3rd generation cohort study Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 investigated a subset of the Isle of Wight cohort, however, they confirmed that the subcohort was representative of the larger cohort, hence scored one star for D1 and D9.

Figure 3. Newcastle-Ottawa assessment of bias in cohort studies. As infant epigenetic data are not available prenatally, all studies have ‘not applicable’ for D4 (outcome of interest not present at start).

Accuracy of the dietary exposure measures

All studies scored one star for D2 (selection of the non-exposed cohort) as cohort studies dichotomised the exposure groups using an aspect of diet meaning that the non-exposed cohort selection was a subset of the selected cohort. All but the Feeding fetus study Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 scored no stars for D3 (ascertainment of exposure) as the dietary exposure measure was self-reported using an FFQ. Bianchi et al. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 used a biomarker of dietary omega-3 PUFA exposure and scored one star for D3 being considered an objective ‘secure record’. Chiu et al. Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 scored no stars for D3 as dietary omega-3 PUFA intakes were assessed using a validated FFQ including multivitamin supplement intakes during pregnancy. Although Chiu et al. Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 used previously validated FFQ-obtained estimates of omega-3 PUFA against erythrocyte and plasma fatty acids, Reference Fawzi, Rifas-Shiman, Rich-Edwards, Willett and Gillman46,Reference Oken, Guthrie and Bloomingdale47 there were no biomarkers of omega-3 PUFA intake hence no stars were scored for D3.

Cohort comparability

Losol et al. Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 scored no stars for D5 (Comparability: study design or analysis controls for most important factor) and D6 (Comparability: study analysis controls for most important factors) for not controlling or adjusting analyses for important factors known to influence methylation. Strict inclusion/exclusion criteria were used in Bianchi et al. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 to control for factors known to influence methylation, hence cohort comparability (D5) scored one star. The same study collected dietary intake using an FFQ; however, it was not used, and diet was not controlled for in the analyses hence (D6) scored no stars as unreported aspects of dietary intake may have biased the results.

Follow-up on study outcomes

Although epigenetic outcomes do not fit well with starred options for D7 (assessment of outcome) ‘independent blind assessment’ nor ‘record linkage’, they are of better quality than ‘self-report’ and ‘not described’. The follow-up period was adequate for the outcome to occur in all studies scoring D8 (follow-up long enough).

Assessment of reporting and publication bias

Most of the studies did not explicitly state their primary and secondary outcomes, making it difficult to assess whether results were selectively reported or published. Bias in the selection of the reported results is possible as there was no evidence of data analysis pre-registration plans; however, most studies presented many null results not just favourable or significant results. The effect sizes reported in the included studies were small, indicating that selective non-reporting bias may only be minor, however, there still may be studies that were not published based on null results.

Certainty assessment

The results presented in this systematic review provide low certainty that specific dietary patterns in pregnancy are associated with epigenetic state in infants (Table 4). All studies had limitations and were assessed as having moderate to high risk of bias (Figs. 2 and 3). The certainty of the results was reduced by small sample sizes and the level of imprecision in the effect size estimates due to heterogeneous analysis methods (Table 3), including inconsistency in adjusting for confounders and adjusting for multiple testing. Not all studies directly addressed the research question ‘how do specific prenatal dietary patterns associate with epigenetic state in infants?’ as some only considered fish intake Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 or omega-3 PUFA intake Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 and excluded the rest of the diet from analysis or adjustment. Furthermore, the differences in the participant characteristics and baseline risk factors make it difficult to directly address this question (Table 1). There was inconsistency in the approaches used to measure and analyse DNA methylation data, contributing to the lower quality of evidence (Table 3). The certainty of these results is influenced by the potential for reporting or publication bias as studies may be missing. It is unclear whether these results overestimated the reported association. Therefore, the evidence presented in this systematic review provides low certainty that dietary patterns in pregnancy relate to epigenetic state in infants with very low to high effect sizes.

Table 4. GRADE certainty assessment of the evidence supporting the statement ’Specific dietary patterns in pregnancy are associated with epigenetic state in infants’

Discussion

This study is the first to systematically investigate the potential effect of maternal dietary patterns on infant epigenetic state in humans and encompasses seven studies published prior to April 2022. This review yielded low certainty, heterogeneous evidence that maternal dietary intake was associated with epigenetic state in infants with a range of effect sizes, from very low to large, across a range of sample sizes (from small to large). DNA methylation was analysed in cord blood neonatal dried blood spots or peripheral blood in mid-childhood (Saffari et al., 2020) using either EWAS or gene-specific approaches. Low and very low magnitudes of effects are common in environmental epigenetic studies. Reference Tsai and Bell48Reference Breton, Marsit and Faustman50 The effect sizes in our study ranged from very low (<1%), to low (1%–5%), moderate (5%–10%) and large (>10%). It is unclear how these effect sizes relate to health. However, one of the included studies found that adherence to a Mediterranean diet during pregnancy was associated with better behavioural outcomes, and sex-dependent differences in methylation at four infant DMRs. Reference House, Mendez and Maguire51 Importantly, this study reported opposing differences in effects between the sexes for two DMRs (SGCE/PET10, PLAGL1). It is therefore difficult to translate this evidence, even into dietary recommendations as sex is not always known during pregnancy; moreover, further studies are needed to replicate this result. However, more broadly, the evidence is unequivocal that a healthier prenatal diet is consistently associated with better behavioural outcomes in children Reference Borge, Aase, Brantsæter and Biele52 ; this may occur via epigenetic regulation, adequate nutrition, or may include other pathways such as the prenatal gut microbiota. Reference Dawson, O’Hely and Jacka53 The health implications of differential methylation and sex-dependent or low effect sizes needs further investigation. Reference Breton, Marsit and Faustman54 In the NEST study, there were sex-specific maternal MDA and associations of DNA methylation within SGCE/PEG10, IGF2 and MEG3 and child behaviours such as depression, anxiety, atypical and autism spectrum disorder-related behaviours. Reference House, Mendez and Maguire51

Folic acid has a well-established role in the methionine cycle, central to 1-carbon metabolism. Reference Mentch and Locasale55 Unsurprisingly, epigenome-wide FDR-significant associations have been found between maternal plasma folate levels and infant DNA methylation (443 DMCpGs in 320 genes). Reference Joubert, den Dekker and Felix56 However, omega-3 PUFAs are also an important input to the methionine cycle, Reference Dawson, O’Hely and Jacka53 which is needed for methylation reactions. In the present systematic review, three studies reported low to medium effect sizes for the association between maternal omega-3 PUFA intake and offspring DNA methylation. Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35Reference Chiu, Fadadu and Gaskins37 One study used a biomarker to measure dietary intake, Reference Bianchi, Alisi and Fabrizi35 which is favourable to a food frequency questionnaires or dietary recall due to lack of recall bias. Reference Hedrick, Dietrich, Estabrooks, Savla, Serrano and Davy57 Another recorded the frequency of oily fish intake during trimester three, without defining a serve and did not measure full dietary intake. Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil36 It is unclear whether these results are confounded by unmeasured supplemental fish oil, as pregnant women frequently consume such supplements. Reference Greenberg, Bell and Ausdal58 It is difficult to translate this evidence into concrete dietary recommendations as food frequency questionnaires and biomarkers do not capture full dietary intakes. Although theoretically possible, we were unable to conclude with certainty that prenatal dietary omega-3 PUFA intake relates to methylation in infants due to the small number of studies, different methods of measurement, small to moderate sample sizes and low methodological quality evidence.

Strengths and limitations

The strengths of this study include adherence to the PRISMA guidelines, Reference Page, McKenzie and Bossuyt26,Reference Page, Moher and Bossuyt59 including rigorous assessment of study quality. The conclusions of this study were limited by study heterogeneity, including varied study quality, methods and differing exposures and outcomes. We caution drawing conclusions from dietary exposures that do not reflect full dietary intakes, or that only measure the maternal diet at one point in time. All of the included studies had deficits in dietary measurement. At best, the low glycaemic index study measured diet throughout pregnancy using an FFQ at every trimester. However, the participants were aware that their diet was reviewed by a dietitian Reference Geraghty, Sexton-Oates and O’Brien32 and this may have resulted in social-desirability bias. Reference Hebert, Clemow, Pbert, Ockene and Ockene60 Moreover, FFQs are inflexible and may not capture full dietary intake due to the limited number of food items surveyed. Reference Bingham, Gill and Welch61 FFQ can also suffer recall bias and problems estimating frequency and are therefore less accurate than 24-hour dietary recalls, or the gold-standard weighed food records. Reference Bingham, Gill and Welch61,Reference Fontana, Pan and Sazonov62 Other studies measured diet in a manner that may miss changes in intakes. For example, the Isle of Wight 3rd Generation Cohort study recorded the frequency of oily fish consumed in the third trimester of pregnancy, Reference Losol, Rezwan and Patil40 and the NEST study did not state the duration that the FFQ was recorded. Reference House, Mendez and Maguire34 Eating habits during the recorded time may not completely reflect mothers’ diet throughout pregnancy, due to food aversions and nausea. Reference Crozier, Inskip, Godfrey, Cooper and Robinson63 The C-MACH study measured caloric intake. Reference Miyaso, Sakurai and Takase33 However, this does not provide information on diet quality or the variety of foods consumed. Conversely, the NEST study Reference House, Mendez and Maguire51 reflects a whole-of-diet approach that is more suitable for translation and adoption. The dietary exposure measures were heterogeneous across studies, making it difficult to draw concrete conclusions, or translate the evidence into dietary recommendations. There was heterogeneity in the ethnicities of the cohorts which may have limited precision. Different ethnicities could confound our results as diet quality Reference Yau, Adams, White and Nicolaou64 and genetic background can vary across ethnicities. Reference Mozhui, Smith and Tylavsky65 All participants recruited in the C-MACH study were from a Japanese population whereas participants in the other studies were mainly European in origin. This review provides low-certainty evidence that there is a relationship between maternal diet and epigenetic state of the infant. The lower certainty is due to limitations in study designs and analysis. Heterogeneity and quality DNA methylation analysis were evident across studies. This includes issues such as sample size; adjusting for multiple testing; testing and adjustment for technical, biological and environmental confounders; quality control of DNA methylation data, testing for genetic confounding of epigenetic state; testing for bias or inflation; and replication/meta-analysis. A major limitation in all seven studies was that other epigenetic mechanisms other than DNA methylation, such as histone modification and non-coding RNAs, were not examined. Therefore, changes to such states may have gone unnoticed.

Future recommendations

The limited number of studies in this field highlights the need for further high-quality work to evaluate the impact of maternal diet on infant epigenetic state. In designing these studies some of the following points should be considered. Total dietary intake should be measured while accounting for supplement use. Ideally, dietary intake should be recorded in a manner that reflects the maternal diet throughout pregnancy to enable dietary patterns to be derived, or calculation of diet quality indices using standardised scoring methods that indicate adherence to dietary guidelines (such as the Healthy Eating Index, 66 or a Mediterranean diet score). Reference Martínez-González, García-Arellano and Toledo67 Epigenetic modifications can be analysed in cord blood and other biosamples including buccal swabs/saliva and placenta, and we recommend that such analysis be considered alongside that of DNA methylation in future studies. This will provide a more complete picture of the epigenetic consequences of maternal nutrition in offspring, as alteration of each modification may not have the same effect on gene expression. The time-period for the maternal diet to have its effects on the offspring may vary; therefore, follow-up of children from birth cohorts is needed to ascertain the potential health relevance of methylation difference in infancy that may otherwise remain unnoticed in a study with a shorter time duration. Ideally, epigenetic state should be measured at a subsequent timepoint in childhood to determine whether epigenetic associations can last beyond birth. The parameters we used to assess quality of epigenetic analysis in this review were taken from personal experience of one author (JMC), from reviews on the analysis of environmental EWAS in children, and from EWAS methodology in general. We recommend that researchers familiarise themselves with the following issues at a minimum before planning their studies: sample size, tissue sampled, analytical platforms, confounders and covariates including cellular heterogeneity, quality control steps, genetic confounding and adjustment for multiple testing. We also recommend that researchers provide a list of DMCpGs/DMRs that includes raw and adjusted p-values and effect sizes and provide proportion of DMCpGs/DMRs at the stated level of significance should also be stated to enable comparison with other studies. We also recommend measuring inflation, which tests for the effects of technical and biological confounders. We recommend increasing study power by pooling data into meta-analyses via consortia and/or combining new data with previously published studies. Additionally, consulting with community stakeholders and pre-publishing study plans should be carried out more often. Finally, we encourage accurate reporting of results, avoiding erroneous conclusions about cause vs association and avoiding selective reporting of significant associations.

Conclusion

This study expands the previous reviews that have focused on individual dietary supplements Reference Dilli, Doğan and İpek68Reference Qian, Huang and Liang70 or micronutrients, Reference Shaw, Carmichael, Yang, Selvin and Schaffer71Reference Saffari, Shrestha and Issarapu75 by investigating prenatal dietary intakes and epigenetic outcomes in infants. This review yielded low certainty, heterogeneous evidence that maternal dietary intake was associated with epigenetic state in infants with a range of effect sizes from very low to large across a range of sample sizes (from small to large). The conclusions of this study were limited by study heterogeneity, including varied study quality, methods and differing exposures and outcomes. Further, larger, well-designed studies are needed ideally with comprehensive dietary assessment and longer follow-up periods.

Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge the Early Life Epigenetics group for giving us an opportunity to present the review during lab meetings and receive feedback from its members.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Competing interests

None.

References

Barker, DJ. The origins of the developmental origins theory. J Intern Med. 2007; 261(5), 412417.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gluckman, PD, Hanson, MA, Cooper, C, Thornburg, KL. Effect of in utero and early-life conditions on adult health and disease. N Engl J Med. 2008; 359(1), 6173.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McMullen, S, Mostyn, A. Animal models for the study of the developmental origins of health and disease: workshop on nutritional models of the developmental origins of adult health and disease. P Nutr Soc. 2009; 68(3), 306320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Albert, BB, Vickers, MH, Gray, C, et al. Fish oil supplementation to rats fed high-fat diet during pregnancy prevents development of impaired insulin sensitivity in male adult offspring. Sci Rep-UK. 2017; 7(1), 5595.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Christians, JK, Lennie, KI, Wild, LK, Garcha, R. Effects of high-fat diets on fetal growth in rodents: a systematic review. Reprod Biol Endocrin. 2019; 17(1), 39.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Strakovsky, RS, Zhang, X, Zhou, D, Pan, Y-X. Gestational high fat diet programs hepatic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene expression and histone modification in neonatal offspring rats. J Physiol. 2011; 589(Pt 11), 27072717.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vucetic, Z, Kimmel, J, Totoki, K, Hollenbeck, E, Reyes, TM. Maternal high-fat diet alters methylation and gene expression of dopamine and opioid-related genes. Endocrinology. 2010; 151(10), 47564764.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mandy, M, Nyirenda, M. Developmental origins of health and disease: the relevance to developing nations. Int Health. 2018; 10(2), 6670.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cavalli, G, Heard, E. Advances in epigenetics link genetics to the environment and disease. Nature. 2019; 571(7766), 489499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bibikova, M, Fan, JB. Genome-wide DNA methylation profiling. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Syst Biol Med. 2010; 2(2), 210223.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amenyah, SD, Hughes, CF, Ward, M, et al. Influence of nutrients involved in one-carbon metabolism on DNA methylation in adults—a systematic review and meta-analysis. Nutr Rev. 2020; 78(8), 647666.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Anderson, OS, Sant, KE, Dolinoy, DC. Nutrition and epigenetics: an interplay of dietary methyl donors, one-carbon metabolism and DNA methylation. J Nutr Biochem. 2012; 23(8), 853859.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gong, L, Pan, YX, Chen, H. Gestational low protein diet in the rat mediates Igf2 gene expression in male offspring via altered hepatic DNA methylation. Ciba F Symp. 2010; 5(7), 619626.Google ScholarPubMed
Lillycrop, KA, Phillips, ES, Jackson, AA, Hanson, MA, Burdge, GC. Dietary protein restriction of pregnant rats induces and folic acid supplementation prevents epigenetic modification of hepatic gene expression in the offspring. J Nutr. 2005; 135(6), 13821386.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lillycrop, KA, Slater-Jefferies, JL, Hanson, MA, Godfrey, KM, Jackson, AA, Burdge, GC. Induction of altered epigenetic regulation of the hepatic glucocorticoid receptor in the offspring of rats fed a protein-restricted diet during pregnancy suggests that reduced DNA methyltransferase-1 expression is involved in impaired DNA methylation and changes in histone modifications. Br J Nutr. 2007; 97(6), 10641073.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhang, N. Epigenetic modulation of DNA methylation by nutrition and its mechanisms in animals. Animal Nutrition. 2015; 1(3), 144151.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geraghty, AA, Lindsay, KL, Alberdi, G, McAuliffe, FM, Gibney, ER. Nutrition during pregnancy impacts offspring’s epigenetic status—Evidence from human and animal studies. Nutrition and Metabolic Insights. 2015; 8s1, NMI.S29527.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andraos, S, de Seymour, JV, O’Sullivan, JM, Kussmann, M. The impact of nutritional interventions in pregnant women on DNA methylation patterns of the offspring: a systematic review. Mol Nutr Food Res. 2018; 62(24), 1800034.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geraghty, AA, Lindsay, KL, Alberdi, G, McAuliffe, FM, Gibney, ER. Nutrition during pregnancy impacts offspring’s epigenetic status-evidence from human and animal studies. Nutr Metab Insights. 2015; 8(Suppl 1), 4147.Google ScholarPubMed
McKay, JA, Groom, A, Potter, C, et al. Genetic and non-genetic influences during pregnancy on infant global and site specific DNA methylation: role for folate gene variants and vitamin B12. PLOS ONE. 2012; 7(3), e33290.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hoyo, C, Murtha, AP, Schildkraut, JM, et al. Methylation variation at IGF2 differentially methylated regions and maternal folic acid use before and during pregnancy. Ciba F Symp. 2011; 6(7), 928936.Google ScholarPubMed
Steegers-Theunissen, RP, Obermann-Borst, SA, Kremer, D, et al. Periconceptional maternal folic acid use of 400 μg per day is related to increased methylation of the IGF2 gene in the very young child. PLOS ONE. 2009; 4(11), e7845.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryer, AA, Nafee, TM, Ismail, KMK, Carroll, WD, Emes, RD, Farrell, WE. LINE-1 DNA methylation is inversely correlated with cord plasma homocysteine in man: a preliminary study. Ciba F Symp. 2009; 4(6), 394398.Google ScholarPubMed
Andraos, S, de Seymour, JV, O’Sullivan, JM, Kussmann, M. The impact of nutritional interventions in pregnant women on DNA methylation patterns of the offspring: a systematic review. Mol Nutr Food Res. 2018; 62(24), 1800034.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blumfield, ML, Hure, AJ, Macdonald-Wicks, L, Smith, R, Collins, CE. Systematic review and meta-analysis of energy and macronutrient intakes during pregnancy in developed countries. Nutr Rev. 2012; 70(6), 322336.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Page, MJ, McKenzie, JE, Bossuyt, PM, et al. The PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews. BMJ. 2021; 372, n71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ouzzani, M, Hammady, H, Fedorowicz, Z, Elmagarmid, A. Rayyan—a web and mobile app for systematic reviews. Systematic Reviews. 2016; 5(1), 210.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schünemann, HBJ, Guyatt, G, Oxman, A. GRADE handbook for grading quality of evidence and strength of recommendations, 2023. https://gdt.gradepro.org/app/handbook/handbook.html.Google Scholar
Halpern, S, Douglas, M. Appendix: Jadad Scale for Reporting Randomized Controlled Trials. (2005, 2007) Evidence-Based Obstetric Anesthesia, 2005; pp. 237238. Blackwell Publishing Ltd.Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Wells, G, Shea, B, O’Connell, D, et al. The newcastle-ottawa scale (NOS) for assessing the quality of nonrandomised studies in meta-analyses, 2013. http://www.ohri.ca/programs/clinical_epidemiology/oxford.asp.Google Scholar
McGuinness, LA, Higgins, JPT. Risk-of-bias VISualization (robvis): an R package and Shiny web app for visualizing risk-of-bias assessments. Res Synth Methods. 2021; 12(1), 5561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geraghty, AA, Sexton-Oates, A, O’Brien, EC, et al. A low glycaemic index diet in pregnancy induces DNA methylation variation in blood of newborns: results from the ROLO randomised controlled trial. Nutrients. 2018; 10(4), 455.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miyaso, H, Sakurai, K, Takase, S, et al. The methylation levels of the H19 differentially methylated region in human umbilical cords reflect newborn parameters and changes by maternal environmental factors during early pregnancy. Environ Res. 2017; 157, 18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
House, JS, Mendez, M, Maguire, RL, et al. Periconceptional maternal mediterranean diet is associated with favorable offspring behaviors and altered CpG methylation of imprinted genes. Front Cell Dev Biol. 2018; 6(101630250), 107.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bianchi, M, Alisi, A, Fabrizi, M, et al. Maternal intake of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids during pregnancy is associated with differential methylation profiles in cord blood white cells. Front Genet. 2019; 10(101560621), 1050.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Losol, P, Rezwan, FI, Patil, VK, et al. Effect of gestational oily fish intake on the risk of allergy in children may be influenced by FADS1/2, ELOVL5 expression and DNA methylation. Genes Nutr. 2019; 14(101280108), 20.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chiu, Y-H, Fadadu, RP, Gaskins, AJ, et al. Dietary fat intake during early pregnancy is associated with cord blood DNA methylation at IGF2 and H19 genes in newborns. Environ Mol Mutagen. 2021; 62(7), 388398.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Küpers, LK, Fernández-Barrés, S, Nounu, A, et al. Maternal mediterranean diet in pregnancy and newborn DNA methylation: a meta-analysis in the PACE consortium. Ciba F Symp. 2022; 17(11), 113. DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2022.2038412.Google ScholarPubMed
Bianchi, M, Alisi, A, Fabrizi, M, et al. Maternal intake of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids during pregnancy is associated with differential methylation profiles in cord blood white cells. Front Genet. 2019; 10, 1050.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Losol, P, Rezwan, FI, Patil, VK, et al. Effect of gestational oily fish intake on the risk of allergy in children may be influenced by FADS1/2, ELOVL5 expression and DNA methylation. Genes Nutr. 2019; 14(1), 20.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chen, YA, Lemire, M, Choufani, S, et al. Discovery of cross-reactive probes and polymorphic CpGs in the illumina infinium HumanMethylation450 microarray. Ciba F Symp. 2013; 8(2), 203209.Google ScholarPubMed
Pidsley, R, Zotenko, E, Peters, TJ, et al. Critical evaluation of the illumina methylationEPIC beadChip microarray for whole-genome DNA methylation profiling. Genome Biol. 2016; 17(1), 208.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lappalainen, T, Greally, JM. Associating cellular epigenetic models with human phenotypes. Nat Rev Genet. 2017; 18(7), 441451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Guintivano, J, Shabalin, AA, Chan, RF, et al. Test-statistic inflation in methylome-wide association studies. Ciba F Symp. 2020; 15(11), 11631166.Google ScholarPubMed
Miyaso, H, Sakurai, K, Takase, S, et al. The methylation levels of the H19 differentially methylated region in human umbilical cords reflect newborn parameters and changes by maternal environmental factors during early pregnancy. Environ Res. 2017; 157, 18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fawzi, WW, Rifas-Shiman, SL, Rich-Edwards, JW, Willett, WC, Gillman, MW. Calibration of a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire in early pregnancy. Ann Epidemiol. 2004; 14(10), 754762.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Oken, E, Guthrie, LB, Bloomingdale, A, et al. Assessment of dietary fish consumption in pregnancy: comparing one-, four- and thirty-six-item questionnaires. Public Health Nutr. 2014; 17(9), 19491959.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsai, P-C, Bell, JT. Power and sample size estimation for epigenome-wide association scans to detect differential DNA methylation. Int J Epidemiol. 2015; 44(4), 14291441.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mansell, G, Gorrie-Stone, TJ, Bao, Y, et al. Guidance for DNA methylation studies: statistical insights from the illumina EPIC array. BMC Genom. 2019; 20(1), 366.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Breton, CV, Marsit, CJ, Faustman, E, et al. Small-magnitude effect sizes in epigenetic end points are important in children’s environmental health studies: the children’s environmental health and disease prevention research center’s epigenetics working group. Environ Health Perspect. 2017; 125(4), 511526.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
House, JS, Mendez, M, Maguire, RL, et al. Periconceptional maternal mediterranean diet is associated with favorable offspring behaviors and altered cpG methylation of imprinted genes. Front Cell Dev Biol. 2018; 6, 107.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borge, TC, Aase, H, Brantsæter, AL, Biele, G. The importance of maternal diet quality during pregnancy on cognitive and behavioural outcomes in children: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ Open. 2017; 7(9), e016777.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, SL, O’Hely, M, Jacka, FN, et al. Maternal prenatal gut microbiota composition predicts child behaviour. EBioMedicine. 2021; 68, 103400.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Breton, CV, Marsit, CJ, Faustman, E, et al. Small-magnitude effect sizes in epigenetic end points are important in children’s environmental health studies: the children’s environmental health and disease prevention research center’s epigenetics working group. Environ Health Persp. 2017; 125(4), 511526.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mentch, SJ, Locasale, JW. One-carbon metabolism and epigenetics: understanding the specificity. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2016; 1363(1), 9198.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Joubert, BR, den Dekker, HT, Felix, JF, et al. Maternal plasma folate impacts differential DNA methylation in an epigenome-wide meta-analysis of newborns. Nat Commun. 2016; 7(1), 10577.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedrick, VE, Dietrich, AM, Estabrooks, PA, Savla, J, Serrano, E, Davy, BM. Dietary biomarkers: advances, limitations and future directions. Nutr J. 2012; 11(1), 109.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenberg, JA, Bell, SJ, Ausdal, WV. Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation during pregnancy. Rev Obstet Gynecol. 2008; 1(4), 162169.Google ScholarPubMed
Page, MJ, Moher, D, Bossuyt, PM, et al. PRISMA 2020 explanation and elaboration: updated guidance and exemplars for reporting systematic reviews. BMJ. 2021; 372, n160.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hebert, JR, Clemow, L, Pbert, L, Ockene, IS, Ockene, JK. Social desirability bias in dietary self-report may compromise the validity of dietary intake measures. Int J Epidemiol. 1995; 24(2), 389398.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bingham, SA, Gill, C, Welch, A, et al. Comparison of dietary assessment methods in nutritional epidemiology: weighed records v. 24 h recalls, food-frequency questionnaires and estimated-diet records. Br J Nutr. 1994; 72(4), 619643.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fontana, JM, Pan, Z, Sazonov, ES, et al. Reproducibility of dietary intake measurement from diet diaries, photographic food records, and a novel sensor method. Front Nutr. 2020; 7, 99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crozier, SR, Inskip, HM, Godfrey, KM, Cooper, C, Robinson, SM and the SWS Study Group. Nausea and vomiting in early pregnancy: effects on food intake and diet quality. Matern Child Nutr. 2017; 13(4), e12389.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yau, A, Adams, J, White, M, Nicolaou, M. Differences in diet quality and socioeconomic patterning of diet quality across ethnic groups: cross-sectional data from the HELIUS dietary patterns study. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2020; 74(3), 387396.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mozhui, K, Smith, AK, Tylavsky, FA. Ancestry dependent DNA methylation and influence of maternal nutrition. PLOS ONE. 2015; 10(3), e0118466.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Overview & Background of The Healthy Eating Index. National cancer institute. https://epi.grants.cancer.gov/hei/.Google Scholar
Martínez-González, MA, García-Arellano, A, Toledo, E, et al. A 14-item mediterranean diet assessment tool and obesity indexes among high-risk subjects: the PREDIMED trial. PLOS ONE. 2012; 7(8), e43134.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dilli, D, Doğan, NN, İpek, M, et al. MaFOS-GDM trial: maternal fish oil supplementation in women with gestational diabetes and cord blood DNA methylation at insulin like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) gene. Clin Nutr ESPEN. 2018; 23, 7378.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
van Dijk, SJ, Zhou, J, Peters, TJ, et al. Effect of prenatal DHA supplementation on the infant epigenome: results from a randomized controlled trial. Clin Epigenetics. 2016; 8(1), 114.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Qian, YY, Huang, XL, Liang, H, et al. Effects of maternal folic acid supplementation on gene methylation and being small for gestational age. J Hum Nutr Diet. 2016; 29(5), 643651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shaw, GM, Carmichael, SL, Yang, W, Selvin, S, Schaffer, DM. Periconceptional dietary intake of choline and betaine and neural tube defects in offspring. Am J Epidemiol. 2004; 160(2), 102109.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Haggarty, P, Hoad, G, Campbell, DM, Horgan, GW, Piyathilake, C, McNeill, G. Folate in pregnancy and imprinted gene and repeat element methylation in the offspring. Am J Clin Nutr. 2013; 97(1), 9499.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pauwels, S, Duca, RC, Devlieger, R, et al. Maternal methyl-group donor intake and global DNA (Hydroxy)Methylation before and during pregnancy. Nutrients. 2016; 8(8), 474.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Irwin, RE, Thursby, S-J, Ondičová, M, et al. A randomized controlled trial of folic acid intervention in pregnancy highlights a putative methylation-regulated control element at ZFP57. Clin Epigenetics. 2019; 11(1), 31.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Saffari, A, Shrestha, S, Issarapu, P, et al. Effect of maternal preconceptional and pregnancy micronutrient interventions on children’s DNA methylation: findings from the EMPHASIS study. Am J Clin Nutr. 2020; 112(4), 10991113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walsh, JM, McGowan, CA, Mahony, R, Foley, ME, McAuliffe, FM. Low glycaemic index diet in pregnancy to prevent macrosomia (ROLO study): randomised control trial. BMJ Brit Med J. 2012; 345, e5605e5605.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sakurai, K, Miyaso, H, Eguchi, A, et al. Chiba study of mother and children ’s health (C-MACH): cohort study with omics analyses. BMJ Open. 2016; 6(1), e010531.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cinelli, G, Fabrizi, M, Ravà, L, et al. Influence of maternal obesity and gestational weight gain on maternal and foetal lipid profile. Nutrients. 2016; 8(6), 368.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arshad, SH, Karmaus, W, Zhang, H, Holloway, JW. Multigenerational cohorts in patients with asthma and allergy. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2017; 139(2), 415421.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Venter, C, Higgins, B, Grundy, J, Clayton, CB, Gant, C, Dean, T. Reliability and validity of a maternal food frequency questionnaire designed to estimate consumption of common food allergens. J Hum Nutr Diet. 2006; 19(2), 129138.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1. PRISMA flow diagram showing selection of included studies for this review.

Figure 1

Table 1. Study characteristics

Figure 2

Table 2. Epigenetic results

Figure 3

Table 3. Assessment of epigenetic data analysis: methods, quality control

Figure 4

Figure 2. Jadad scale for reporting randomised controlled trials.

Figure 5

Figure 3. Newcastle-Ottawa assessment of bias in cohort studies. As infant epigenetic data are not available prenatally, all studies have ‘not applicable’ for D4 (outcome of interest not present at start).

Figure 6

Table 4. GRADE certainty assessment of the evidence supporting the statement ’Specific dietary patterns in pregnancy are associated with epigenetic state in infants’