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Two-step epigenetic Mendelian randomization: a strategy for establishing the causal role of epigenetic processes in pathways to disease
Caroline L. Relton, George Davey Smith
International Journal of Epidemiology · 2012 · ▲ 602 citations
Abstract
The burgeoning interest in the field of epigenetics has precipitated the need to develop approaches to strengthen causal inference when considering the role of epigenetic mediators of environmental exposures on disease risk. Epigenetic markers, like any other molecular biomarker, are vulnerable to confounding and reverse causation. Here, we present a strategy, based on the well-established framework of Mendelian randomization, to interrogate the causal relationships between exposure, DNA methylation and outcome. The two-step approach first uses a genetic proxy for the exposure of interest to assess the causal relationship between exposure and methylation. A second step then utilizes a genetic proxy for DNA methylation to interrogate the causal relationship between DNA methylation and outcome. The rationale, origins, methodology, advantages and limitations of this novel strategy are presented.
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- 10.1093/ije/dyr233
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- 2026-06-09 MST
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APA
Relton, C.L., & Smith, G.D. (2012). Two-step epigenetic Mendelian randomization: a strategy for establishing the causal role of epigenetic processes in pathways to disease. <em>International Journal of Epidemiology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyr233
Vancouver
Relton CL, Smith GD. Two-step epigenetic Mendelian randomization: a strategy for establishing the causal role of epigenetic processes in pathways to disease. International Journal of Epidemiology. 2012. doi:10.1093/ije/dyr233.
BibTeX
@article{caroline2012Twoste,
title = {Two-step epigenetic Mendelian randomization: a strategy for establishing the causal role of epigenetic processes in pathways to disease},
author = {Caroline L. Relton and George Davey Smith},
journal = {International Journal of Epidemiology},
year = {2012},
doi = {10.1093/ije/dyr233},
}
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