» Articles » PMID: 36882010

Genetic and Environmental Factors Underlying Parallel Changes in Body Mass Index and Alcohol Consumption: A 36-Year Longitudinal Study of Adult Twins

Overview
Journal Obes Facts
Publisher Karger
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2023 Mar 7
PMID 36882010
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Introduction: While the genetic and environmental underpinnings of body weight and alcohol use are fairly well-known, determinants of simultaneous changes in these traits are still poorly known. We sought to quantify the environmental and genetic components underlying parallel changes in weight and alcohol consumption and to investigate potential covariation between them.

Methods: The analysis comprised 4,461 adult participants (58% women) from the Finnish Twin Cohort with four measures of alcohol consumption and body mass index (BMI) over a 36-year follow-up. Trajectories of each trait were described by growth factors, defined as intercepts (i.e., baseline) and slopes (i.e., change over follow-up), using latent growth curve modeling. Growth values were used for male (190 monozygotic pairs, 293 dizygotic pairs) and female (316 monozygotic pairs, 487 dizygotic pairs) same-sex complete twin pairs in multivariate twin modeling. The variances and covariances of growth factors were then decomposed into genetic and environmental components.

Results: The baseline heritabilities were similar in men (BMI: h2 = 79% [95% confidence interval: 74, 83]; alcohol consumption: h2 = 49% [32, 67]) and women (h2 = 77% [73, 81]; h2 = 45% [29, 61]). Heritabilities of BMI change were similar in men (h2 = 52% [42, 61]) and women (h2 = 57% [50, 63]), but the heritability of change in alcohol consumption was significantly higher (p = 0.03) in men (h2 = 45% [34, 54]) than in women (h2 = 31% [22, 38]). Significant additive genetic correlations between BMI at baseline and change in alcohol consumption were observed in both men (rA = -0.17 [-0.29, -0.04]) and women (rA = -0.18 [-0.31, -0.06]). Non-shared environmental factors affecting changes in alcohol consumption and BMI were correlated in men (rE = 0.18 [0.06, 0.30]). Among women, non-shared environmental factors affecting baseline alcohol consumption and the change in BMI were inversely correlated (rE = -0.11 [-0.20, -0.01]).

Conclusions: Based on genetic correlations, genetic variation underlying BMI may affect changes in alcohol consumption. Independent of genetic effects, change in BMI correlates with change in alcohol consumption in men, suggesting direct effects between them.

Citing Articles

Patterns and predictors of alcohol misuse trajectories from adolescence through early midlife.

Stephenson M, Barr P, Thomas N, Cooke M, Latvala A, Rose R Dev Psychopathol. 2024; :1-17.

PMID: 38465371 PMC: 11387953. DOI: 10.1017/S0954579424000543.


Longitudinal multi-omics study reveals common etiology underlying association between plasma proteome and BMI trajectories in adolescent and young adult twins.

Drouard G, Hagenbeek F, Whipp A, Pool R, Hottenga J, Jansen R BMC Med. 2023; 21(1):508.

PMID: 38129841 PMC: 10740308. DOI: 10.1186/s12916-023-03198-7.


Longitudinal multi-omics study reveals common etiology underlying association between plasma proteome and BMI trajectories in adolescent and young adult twins.

Drouard G, Hagenbeek F, Whipp A, Pool R, Hottenga J, Jansen R medRxiv. 2023; .

PMID: 37425750 PMC: 10327285. DOI: 10.1101/2023.06.28.23291995.


Genetic and Environmental Factors Underlying Parallel Changes in Body Mass Index and Alcohol Consumption: A 36-Year Longitudinal Study of Adult Twins.

Drouard G, Silventoinen K, Latvala A, Kaprio J Obes Facts. 2023; 16(3):224-236.

PMID: 36882010 PMC: 10826601. DOI: 10.1159/000529835.

References
1.
Latvala A, Rose R, Pulkkinen L, Dick D, Korhonen T, Kaprio J . Drinking, smoking, and educational achievement: cross-lagged associations from adolescence to adulthood. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2014; 137:106-13. PMC: 3964260. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2014.01.016. View

2.
Thomson C, Wertheim B, Hingle M, Wang L, Neuhouser M, Gong Z . Alcohol consumption and body weight change in postmenopausal women: results from the Women's Health Initiative. Int J Obes (Lond). 2012; 36(9):1158-64. PMC: 6247802. DOI: 10.1038/ijo.2012.84. View

3.
Silventoinen K, Jelenkovic A, Sund R, Yokoyama Y, Hur Y, Cozen W . Differences in genetic and environmental variation in adult BMI by sex, age, time period, and region: an individual-based pooled analysis of 40 twin cohorts. Am J Clin Nutr. 2017; 106(2):457-466. PMC: 5525120. DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.117.153643. View

4.
Grasby K, Verweij K, Mosing M, Zietsch B, Medland S . Estimating Heritability from Twin Studies. Methods Mol Biol. 2017; 1666:171-194. DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-7274-6_9. View

5.
Sayon-Orea C, Martinez-Gonzalez M, Bes-Rastrollo M . Alcohol consumption and body weight: a systematic review. Nutr Rev. 2011; 69(8):419-31. DOI: 10.1111/j.1753-4887.2011.00403.x. View