Maternal stress during lifetime and pregnancy may influence offspring epigenetic age, impacting long-term health. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of associations between maternal stress and epigenetic aging markers: telomere length (TL) and DNA methylation (DNAm) age acceleration. The systematic search was performed according to PRISMA guidelines and registered on PROSPERO (ref. CRD42023474640). Fixed and random effect meta-analyses were carried out, stratified by stress type and marker type (TL, DNAm). Sixteen studies met inclusion criteria; 12 were meta-analyzed (10 TL, 2 DNAm). Due to high heterogeneity, restricted maximum likelihood meta-analysis suggested significant inverse associations between maternal stress and offspring TL. Perceived stress was associated with shorter TL (p-value = 7 & times; 10-4, beta = -0.085, 95%CI [-0.135, -0.036]), as was lifetime stress/trauma (p-value = 0.01, beta = -0.209, 95%CI [-0.370, -0.049]). In contrast, maternal stress showed no significant associations with DNAm age acceleration (p-value = 0.32). Both perceived maternal stress and maternal stress were associated with shorter offspring TL, suggesting that stress exposure across the maternal lifespan influences offspring biological aging markers. No significant association was observed with DNAm-based aging clocks. Further studies with larger sample sizes and more homogeneous settings are needed to confirm and expand upon our observations.

Impact of Maternal Lifetime Stress on Offspring Biological Aging: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Studies

Gianfagna F.;Iacoviello L.;Gialluisi A.
2026-01-01

Abstract

Maternal stress during lifetime and pregnancy may influence offspring epigenetic age, impacting long-term health. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of associations between maternal stress and epigenetic aging markers: telomere length (TL) and DNA methylation (DNAm) age acceleration. The systematic search was performed according to PRISMA guidelines and registered on PROSPERO (ref. CRD42023474640). Fixed and random effect meta-analyses were carried out, stratified by stress type and marker type (TL, DNAm). Sixteen studies met inclusion criteria; 12 were meta-analyzed (10 TL, 2 DNAm). Due to high heterogeneity, restricted maximum likelihood meta-analysis suggested significant inverse associations between maternal stress and offspring TL. Perceived stress was associated with shorter TL (p-value = 7 & times; 10-4, beta = -0.085, 95%CI [-0.135, -0.036]), as was lifetime stress/trauma (p-value = 0.01, beta = -0.209, 95%CI [-0.370, -0.049]). In contrast, maternal stress showed no significant associations with DNAm age acceleration (p-value = 0.32). Both perceived maternal stress and maternal stress were associated with shorter offspring TL, suggesting that stress exposure across the maternal lifespan influences offspring biological aging markers. No significant association was observed with DNAm-based aging clocks. Further studies with larger sample sizes and more homogeneous settings are needed to confirm and expand upon our observations.
2026
2026
DNA methylation; maternal stress; pregnancy; epidemiology; public health
Muñoz Venegas, M. L.; Quiccione, M. S.; Sharma, S.; Gianfagna, F.; Bracone, F.; De Domenico, P.; Tirozzi, A.; Cerletti, C.; Donati, M. B.; De Gaetano,...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2211651
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