4.6 Article

Variation in the heritability of body mass index based on diverse twin studies: a systematic review

Journal

OBESITY REVIEWS
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 871-882

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/obr.12065

Keywords

Body mass index; GDP; heritability; twin study

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health (NIH) from Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD) [U54HD070725]
  2. Ewha Womans University RP-Grant
  3. NICHD
  4. Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR)

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ObjectivesOver the past three decades, twin studies have shown variation in the heritability of obesity. This study examined the difference of body mass index (BMI) heritability (BMI-H) by population characteristics, such as sex, age, time period of observation and average BMI, as well as by broad social-environmental factors as indicated by country-level gross domestic product (GDP) per capita and GDP growth rate. MethodsTwin studies that reported BMI-H and were published in English from January 1990 to February 2011 after excluding those with disease, special occupations or combined heritability estimates for country/ethnic groups were searched in PubMed. 32 studies were identified from Finland (7), the United Kingdom (6), the United States (3), Denmark (3), China (3), Netherlands (2), South Korea (2), Sweden (2) and four from other countries. Meta-regression models with random effects were used to assess variation in BMI-H. ResultsHeterogeneity of BMI-H is significantly attributable to variations in age (<20, 20-55 and 56 years), time period of observation (i.e. year of data collection), average BMI and GDP ($20,000, $20,001-26,000 and >$26,000). BMI-H was higher in adolescents (<20 years), in studies done in past years, and in populations with higher average BMIs or higher GDP per capita ($26,000) than their counterparts. Consistent lowering effects of high GDP growth rate (>median) on BMI-H were shown through stratified analyses by GDP. BMI-H was lower in countries of mid-level GDP, particularly those experiencing rapid economic growth. ConclusionsBMI-H is sensitive to age, time period of observation, average BMI, GDP and rapid economic growth.

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