Skip to main content

Citation

Avery, Christy L.; Howard, Annie Green; Ballou, Anna F.; Buchanan, Victoria L.; Collins, Jason M.; Downie, Carolina G.; Engel, Stephanie M.; Graff, Mariaelisa; Highland, Heather M.; & Lee, Moa P., et al. (2022). Strengthening Causal Inference in Exposomics Research: Application of Genetic Data and Methods. Environmental Health Perspectives, 130(5), 55001. PMCID: PMC9084332

Abstract

Advances in technologies to measure a broad set of exposures have led to a range of exposome research efforts. Yet, these efforts have insufficiently integrated methods that incorporate genetic data to strengthen causal inference, despite evidence that many exposome-associated phenotypes are heritable.
Objective: We demonstrate how integration of methods and study designs that incorporate genetic data can strengthen causal inference in exposomics research by helping address six challenges: reverse causation and unmeasured confounding, comprehensive examination of phenotypic effects, low efficiency, replication, multilevel data integration, and characterization of tissue-specific effects. Examples are drawn from studies of biomarkers and health behaviors, exposure domains where the causal inference methods we describe are most often applied.
Discussion: Technological, computational, and statistical advances in genotyping, imputation, and analysis, combined with broad data sharing and cross-study collaborations, offer multiple opportunities to strengthen causal inference in exposomics research. Full application of these opportunities will require an expanded understanding of genetic variants that predict exposome phenotypes as well as an appreciation that the utility of genetic variants for causal inference will vary by exposure and may depend on large sample sizes. However, several of these challenges can be addressed through international scientific collaborations that prioritize data sharing. Ultimately, we anticipate that efforts to better integrate methods that incorporate genetic data will extend the reach of exposomics research by helping address the challenges of comprehensively measuring the exposome and its health effects across studies, the life course, and in varied contexts and diverse populations.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP9098

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Environmental Health Perspectives

Author(s)

Avery, Christy L.
Howard, Annie Green
Ballou, Anna F.
Buchanan, Victoria L.
Collins, Jason M.
Downie, Carolina G.
Engel, Stephanie M.
Graff, Mariaelisa
Highland, Heather M.
Lee, Moa P.
Lilly, Adam G.
Lu, Kun
Rager, Julia E.
Staley, Brooke S.
North, Kari E.
Gordon-Larsen, Penny

Article Type

Commentary

PMCID

PMC9084332

ORCiD

Avery - 0000-0002-1044-8162
Howard, AG - 0000-0003-0837-8166
Lilly - 0000-0002-3740-1540
Gordon-Larsen - 0000-0001-5322-4188
Graff - 0000-0001-6380-1735
Highland - 000-0002-3583-8239