Mediterranean diet and obesity polygenic risk interaction on adiposity in European children: The IDEFICS/I.Family Study.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Miguel Seral-Cortes, Gabin Drouard, Guiomar Masip, Leonie H Bogl, Stefaan De Henauw, Ronja Foraita, Timm Intemann, Lauren Lissner, Denes Molnar, Rajini Nagrani, Valeria Pala, Catalina Picó, Paola Russo, Gianluca Tognon, Michael Tornaritis, Toomas Veidebaum, Marvin N Wright, Pilar De Miguel-Etayo, Luis A Moreno, Idoia Labayen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and objectives: To examine whether changes in the Mediterranean Diet (MD) or any of its MD food groups modulate the genetic susceptibility to obesity in European youth, both in cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses.

Methods: For cross-sectional analysis, 1982 participants at baseline, 1649 in follow-up 1 (FU1) and 1907 in follow-up 2 (FU2), aged 2-16 years of the IDEFICS/I.Family studies were considered. For the longitudinal design, 1254 participants were included. Adherence to MD was assessed using the Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS), and genetic susceptibility to high BMI was assessed with a polygenic risk score (BMI-PRS). Multiple linear regression models were fitted to estimate gene × MD effects on markers of obesity.

Results: In cross-sectional analyses, at baseline, higher MDS was associated with higher BMI in children with high genetic susceptibility (β = 0.12; 95% CI = [0.01, 0.24]). However, 6 years later, at FU2, higher MDS was associated with lower BMI (β = -0.19; 95% CI = [-0.38, -0.01]) in children with high genetic susceptibility, showing an attenuating MDS effect. Also in FU2, vegetables and legumes (V&L) showed inverse associations with BMI (β = -0.01; CI = [-0.02, -0.00]) and WC (β = -0.02; CI = [-0.03, -0.00]) regardless of the obesity genetic risk, although the effect sizes were small. In the longitudinal analyses, no MDS-obesity associations or gene × diet interaction effects were observed.

Conclusions: In cross-sectional analysis (baseline and FU2), the MD modulated the association between obesity susceptibility and adiposity indicators in European youth, having an exacerbating effect in children measured during infancy years and an attenuating effect in early adolescent years.

地中海饮食和肥胖多基因风险在欧洲儿童肥胖中的相互作用:IDEFICS/I。家庭研究。
背景和目的:通过横断面和纵向分析,研究地中海饮食(MD)或其任何MD食物组的变化是否会调节欧洲青年肥胖的遗传易感性。方法:进行横断面分析,1982名基线参与者,1649名随访1 (FU1)和1907名随访2 (FU2),年龄2-16岁的IDEFICS/I。考虑了家庭研究。纵向设计纳入1254名受试者。使用地中海饮食评分(MDS)评估MD的依从性,并使用多基因风险评分(BMI- prs)评估高BMI的遗传易感性。采用多元线性回归模型估计基因× MD对肥胖标志物的影响。结果:在横断面分析中,基线时,高MDS与高遗传易感性儿童的高BMI相关(β = 0.12;95% ci =[0.01, 0.24])。然而,6年后,在FU2时,高MDS与低BMI相关(β = -0.19;95% CI =[-0.38, -0.01]),显示MDS效应减弱。在FU2中,蔬菜和豆类(V&L)与BMI呈负相关(β = -0.01;CI =[-0.02, -0.00])和WC (β = -0.02;CI =[-0.03, -0.00]),与肥胖遗传风险无关,尽管效应量很小。在纵向分析中,没有观察到mds -肥胖相关或基因-饮食相互作用效应。结论:在横断面分析(基线和FU2)中,MD调节了欧洲青年肥胖易感性和肥胖指标之间的关联,在婴儿期测量的儿童中具有加剧效应,在青少年早期具有减弱效应。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Obesity
Pediatric Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
117
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Obesity is a peer-reviewed, monthly journal devoted to research into obesity during childhood and adolescence. The topic is currently at the centre of intense interest in the scientific community, and is of increasing concern to health policy-makers and the public at large. Pediatric Obesity has established itself as the leading journal for high quality papers in this field, including, but not limited to, the following: Genetic, molecular, biochemical and physiological aspects of obesity – basic, applied and clinical studies relating to mechanisms of the development of obesity throughout the life course and the consequent effects of obesity on health outcomes Metabolic consequences of child and adolescent obesity Epidemiological and population-based studies of child and adolescent overweight and obesity Measurement and diagnostic issues in assessing child and adolescent adiposity, physical activity and nutrition Clinical management of children and adolescents with obesity including studies of treatment and prevention Co-morbidities linked to child and adolescent obesity – mechanisms, assessment, and treatment Life-cycle factors eg familial, intrauterine and developmental aspects of child and adolescent obesity Nutrition security and the "double burden" of obesity and malnutrition Health promotion strategies around the issues of obesity, nutrition and physical activity in children and adolescents Community and public health measures to prevent overweight and obesity in children and adolescents.
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