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Intergenerational polygenic obesity risk throughout adolescence in a cross-sectional study design: The HUNT study, Norway

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22988
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.23284
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Date
2021-10-14
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Næss, Marit; Sund, Erik; Vie, Gunnhild Åberge; Bjørngaard, Johan Håkon; Åsvold, Bjørn Olav; Holmen, Turid Lingaas; Kvaløy, Kirsti
Abstract
Objective - This study examined the relationship between parental obesity polygenic risk and children’s BMI throughout adolescence. Additionally, from a smaller subsample, the objective was to assess whether parental polygenic risk score (PRS) may act as a proxy for offspring PRS in studies lacking offspring genetic data.

Methods - A total of 8,561 parent-offspring (age 13-19 years) trios from the Trøndelag Health Study (the HUNT Study) were included, of which, 1,286 adolescents had available genetic data. Weighted parental PRSs from 900 single-nucleotide polymorphisms robustly associated with adult BMI were constructed and applied in linear mixed-effects models.

Results - A positive association between parental PRS and offspring sex- and age-adjusted BMI (iso-BMI) throughout adolescence was identified. The estimated marginal effects per standard deviation increase in parental PRS were 0.26 (95% CI: 0.18-0.33), 0.36 (95% CI: 0.29-0.43), and 0.62 kg/m2 (95% CI: 0.51-0.72) for maternal, paternal, and combined parental PRS, respectively. In subsample analyses, the magnitude of association of the parental PRS versus offspring PRS with iso-BMI in adolescents was similar.

Conclusions - Parental PRS was consistently associated with offspring iso-BMI throughout adolescence. Results from subsample analyses support the use of parental PRS of obesity as a proxy for adolescent PRS in the absence of offspring genetic data.

Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Næss MN, Sund E, Vie GÅ, Bjørngaard JHB, Åsvold BO, Holmen T, Kvaløy K. Intergenerational polygenic obesity risk throughout adolescence in a cross-sectional study design: The HUNT study, Norway. Obesity. 2021
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