Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic

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Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic. / Ajslev, Teresa A; Ängquist, Lars; Silventoinen, Karri; Baker, Jennifer L; Sørensen, Thorkild I A.

In: PLOS ONE, Vol. 9, No. 10, e109932, 2014, p. 1-8.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ajslev, TA, Ängquist, L, Silventoinen, K, Baker, JL & Sørensen, TIA 2014, 'Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic', PLOS ONE, vol. 9, no. 10, e109932, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109932

APA

Ajslev, T. A., Ängquist, L., Silventoinen, K., Baker, J. L., & Sørensen, T. I. A. (2014). Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic. PLOS ONE, 9(10), 1-8. [e109932]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109932

Vancouver

Ajslev TA, Ängquist L, Silventoinen K, Baker JL, Sørensen TIA. Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic. PLOS ONE. 2014;9(10):1-8. e109932. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109932

Author

Ajslev, Teresa A ; Ängquist, Lars ; Silventoinen, Karri ; Baker, Jennifer L ; Sørensen, Thorkild I A. / Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic. In: PLOS ONE. 2014 ; Vol. 9, No. 10. pp. 1-8.

Bibtex

@article{e14515661326456196da3c0bf1879183,
title = "Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The intergenerational resemblance in body mass index may have increased during the development of the obesity epidemic due to changes in environment and/or expression of genetic predisposition.OBJECTIVES: This study investigates trends in intergenerational correlations of childhood body mass index (BMI; kg/m2) during the emergence of the obesity epidemic.METHODS: The study population was derived from the Copenhagen School Health Records Register, which includes height and weight measurements since birth year 1930. Mothers and fathers with BMIs available at ages 7 (n = 25,923 and n = 20,972) or 13 years (n = 26,750 and n = 21,397), respectively, were linked through the civil registration system introduced in 1968 to their children with BMIs available at age 7 years. Age- and sex-specific BMI z-scores were calculated. Correlations were estimated across eight intervals of child birth years (1952-1989) separately by sex. Trends in these correlations were examined. Whereas the mother-child correlations reflected the biological relationship, a likely decline in the assignment of non-biological fathers through the registration system across time must be considered when interpreting the father-child correlations.RESULTS: The BMI correlations between mothers and sons ranged from 0.29-0.36 and they decreased marginally, albeit significantly across time at ages 7-7 years (-0.002/year, p = 0.006), whereas those at 13-7 years remained stable (<0.0004/year, p = 0.96). Mother-daughter correlations ranged from 0.30-0.34, and they were stable at ages 7-7 years (0.0001/year, p = 0.84) and at 13-7 years (0.0004/year, p = 0.56). In contrast, father-son correlations increased significantly during this period, both at ages 7-7 (0.002/year, p = 0.007) and at ages 13-7 years (0.003/year, p<0.001), whereas the increase in father-daughter correlations were insignificant both at ages 7-7 (0.001/year, p = 0.37) and at ages 13-7 years (0.001/year, p = 0.18).CONCLUSION: During the obesity epidemics development, the intergenerational resemblance with mothers remained stable, whereas the father-child BMI resemblance increased, possibly reflecting changes in family relationships, and unlikely to have influenced the epidemic.",
author = "Ajslev, {Teresa A} and Lars {\"A}ngquist and Karri Silventoinen and Baker, {Jennifer L} and S{\o}rensen, {Thorkild I A}",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0109932",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "1--8",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trends in Parent-Child Correlations of Childhood Body Mass Index during the Development of the Obesity Epidemic

AU - Ajslev, Teresa A

AU - Ängquist, Lars

AU - Silventoinen, Karri

AU - Baker, Jennifer L

AU - Sørensen, Thorkild I A

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - BACKGROUND: The intergenerational resemblance in body mass index may have increased during the development of the obesity epidemic due to changes in environment and/or expression of genetic predisposition.OBJECTIVES: This study investigates trends in intergenerational correlations of childhood body mass index (BMI; kg/m2) during the emergence of the obesity epidemic.METHODS: The study population was derived from the Copenhagen School Health Records Register, which includes height and weight measurements since birth year 1930. Mothers and fathers with BMIs available at ages 7 (n = 25,923 and n = 20,972) or 13 years (n = 26,750 and n = 21,397), respectively, were linked through the civil registration system introduced in 1968 to their children with BMIs available at age 7 years. Age- and sex-specific BMI z-scores were calculated. Correlations were estimated across eight intervals of child birth years (1952-1989) separately by sex. Trends in these correlations were examined. Whereas the mother-child correlations reflected the biological relationship, a likely decline in the assignment of non-biological fathers through the registration system across time must be considered when interpreting the father-child correlations.RESULTS: The BMI correlations between mothers and sons ranged from 0.29-0.36 and they decreased marginally, albeit significantly across time at ages 7-7 years (-0.002/year, p = 0.006), whereas those at 13-7 years remained stable (<0.0004/year, p = 0.96). Mother-daughter correlations ranged from 0.30-0.34, and they were stable at ages 7-7 years (0.0001/year, p = 0.84) and at 13-7 years (0.0004/year, p = 0.56). In contrast, father-son correlations increased significantly during this period, both at ages 7-7 (0.002/year, p = 0.007) and at ages 13-7 years (0.003/year, p<0.001), whereas the increase in father-daughter correlations were insignificant both at ages 7-7 (0.001/year, p = 0.37) and at ages 13-7 years (0.001/year, p = 0.18).CONCLUSION: During the obesity epidemics development, the intergenerational resemblance with mothers remained stable, whereas the father-child BMI resemblance increased, possibly reflecting changes in family relationships, and unlikely to have influenced the epidemic.

AB - BACKGROUND: The intergenerational resemblance in body mass index may have increased during the development of the obesity epidemic due to changes in environment and/or expression of genetic predisposition.OBJECTIVES: This study investigates trends in intergenerational correlations of childhood body mass index (BMI; kg/m2) during the emergence of the obesity epidemic.METHODS: The study population was derived from the Copenhagen School Health Records Register, which includes height and weight measurements since birth year 1930. Mothers and fathers with BMIs available at ages 7 (n = 25,923 and n = 20,972) or 13 years (n = 26,750 and n = 21,397), respectively, were linked through the civil registration system introduced in 1968 to their children with BMIs available at age 7 years. Age- and sex-specific BMI z-scores were calculated. Correlations were estimated across eight intervals of child birth years (1952-1989) separately by sex. Trends in these correlations were examined. Whereas the mother-child correlations reflected the biological relationship, a likely decline in the assignment of non-biological fathers through the registration system across time must be considered when interpreting the father-child correlations.RESULTS: The BMI correlations between mothers and sons ranged from 0.29-0.36 and they decreased marginally, albeit significantly across time at ages 7-7 years (-0.002/year, p = 0.006), whereas those at 13-7 years remained stable (<0.0004/year, p = 0.96). Mother-daughter correlations ranged from 0.30-0.34, and they were stable at ages 7-7 years (0.0001/year, p = 0.84) and at 13-7 years (0.0004/year, p = 0.56). In contrast, father-son correlations increased significantly during this period, both at ages 7-7 (0.002/year, p = 0.007) and at ages 13-7 years (0.003/year, p<0.001), whereas the increase in father-daughter correlations were insignificant both at ages 7-7 (0.001/year, p = 0.37) and at ages 13-7 years (0.001/year, p = 0.18).CONCLUSION: During the obesity epidemics development, the intergenerational resemblance with mothers remained stable, whereas the father-child BMI resemblance increased, possibly reflecting changes in family relationships, and unlikely to have influenced the epidemic.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0109932

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0109932

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25329656

VL - 9

SP - 1

EP - 8

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 10

M1 - e109932

ER -

ID: 137322458