Abstract

Ecological observations suggest an inverse relationship between smoking in pregnancy and celiac disease (CD) in offspring. While individual-level analyses have been inconsistent, they have mostly lacked statistical power or refined assessments of exposure. To examine the association between pregnancy-related smoking and CD in the offspring, as well as its consistency across data sets, we analyzed: (1) The Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort (MoBa) of 94,019 children, followed from birth (2000–2009) through 2016, with 1035 developing CD; (2) a subsample from MoBa (381 with CD and 529 controls) with biomarkers; and (3) a register-based cohort of 536,861 Norwegian children, followed from birth (2004–2012) through 2014, with 1919 developing CD. Smoking behaviors were obtained from pregnancy questionnaires and antenatal visits, or, in the MoBa-subsample, defined by measurement of cord blood cotinine. CD and potential confounders were identified through nationwide registers and comprehensive parental questionnaires. Sustained smoking during pregnancy, both self-reported and cotinine-determined, was inversely associated with CD in MoBa (multivariable-adjusted [a] OR = 0.61 [95%CI, 0.46–0.82] and aOR = 0.55 [95%CI, 0.31–0.98], respectively); an inverse association was also found with the intensity of smoking. These findings differed from those of our register-based cohort, which revealed no association with sustained smoking during pregnancy (aOR = 0.97 [95%CI, 0.80–1.18]). In MoBa, neither maternal smoking before or after pregnancy, nor maternal or paternal smoking in only early pregnancy predicted CD. In a carefully followed pregnancy cohort, a more-detailed smoking assessment than oft-used register-based data, revealed that sustained smoking during pregnancy, rather than any smoking exposure, predicts decreased likelihood of childhood-diagnosed CD.

Highlights

  • Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune small-intestinal disorder prevalent in 1–3% of children in Western populations [1, 2]

  • We primarily examined the association between maternal smoking in pregnancy, defined by questionnaire data, register-based data or cotinine cut-offs, and offspring CD

  • Because the fetal susceptibility to smoke changes during the course of pregnancy [46], we examined the CD risk according to exposure only in early pregnancy (≤ pregnancy weeks) or in early and late pregnancy (≥ pregnancy weeks, referred to as sustained smoking during pregnancy)

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Summary

Introduction

Celiac disease (CD) is an autoimmune small-intestinal disorder prevalent in 1–3% of children in Western populations [1, 2]. In CD, genetic and environmental factors interplay in causing a loss of immune tolerance to gluten [3]. In recent decades, diminishing smoking rates among pregnant women have been observed in many countries [7], while the seroprevalence of CD has doubled [8, 9]. This inverse ecological relationship has not been supported by individuallevel data which have shown a positive or no association, with one exception [10] (previous studies are summarized in Supplementary Table 1) [11,12,13,14,15,16]

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