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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Childhood Environmental and Genetic Predictors of Adulthood Obesity: The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study

Risto TelamaLeena RäsänenIlkka SeppäläMirka HintsanenMikko HurmeMika KähönenRussell ThomsonLiisa Keltikangas-järvinenVera MikkiläCostan G. MagnussenCostan G. MagnussenJussi HernesniemiPeter WürtzPeter WürtzCarita EklundTerho LehtimäkiMika KivimäkiMarkus JuonalaOlli T. RaitakariJorma ViikariJonna Juhola

subject

AdultMaleRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismClinical BiochemistryContext (language use)030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyFamily incomeSocial EnvironmentBiochemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineLongitudinal StudiesObesityRisk factorChildFinland2. Zero hungerParental obesityJCEM Online: Advances in Geneticsbusiness.industryBiochemistry (medical)Middle Agedmedicine.diseaseObesity3. Good healthEndocrinologyCardiovascular DiseasesChild PreschoolBody CompositionFemaleMetabolic syndromebusinessRisk assessmentBody mass indexFollow-Up StudiesGenome-Wide Association Study

description

Obesity from childhood to adulthood is associated with adverse health later in life. Increased youth BMI is a risk factor for later obesity, but it is unknown whether identification of other risk factors, including recently discovered genetic markers, would help to identify children at risk of developing adult obesity.Our objective was to examine the childhood environmental and genetic predictors of adult obesity.We followed 2119 individuals of the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study for up to 27 yr since baseline (1980, age 3-18 yr).We evaluated adult obesity [body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m(2)].The independent predictors (P0.05) of adult obesity included childhood BMI, C-reactive protein (CRP), family income (inverse), mother's BMI, and polymorphisms near genes TFAP2B, LRRN6C, and FLJ35579. A risk assessment based on childhood BMI, mother's BMI, and family income was superior in predicting obesity compared with the approach using data only on BMI (C-statistics 0.751 vs. 0.772, P = 0.0015). Inclusion of data on childhood CRP and novel genetic variants for BMI did not incrementally improve C-value (0.779, P = 0.16). A nonlaboratory risk score (childhood BMI, mother's BMI, and family income) predicted adult obesity in all age groups between 3-18 yr (P always0.001).Childhood BMI, CRP, family income (inversely), mother's BMI, and polymorphisms near genes FLJ35779, TFAP2B, and LRRN6C are independently related to adulthood obesity. However, because genetic risk markers and CRP only marginally improve the prediction, our results indicate that children at high risk of adult obesity can be identified using a simple non-laboratory-based risk assessment.

10.1210/jc.2011-1243https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3167668/