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Shared familial risk factors between autism spectrum disorder and obesity - a register-based familial coaggregation cohort study

Shared familial risk factors between autism spectrum disorder and obesity - a register-based familial coaggregation cohort study
Shared familial risk factors between autism spectrum disorder and obesity - a register-based familial coaggregation cohort study
Background: meta-analyses suggest an association between autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and obesity, but the factors underlying this association remain unclear. This study investigated the association between ASD and obesity stratified on intellectual disability (ID). In addition, in order to gain insight into possible shared etiological factors, the potential role of shared familial liability was examined.

Method: we studied a cohort of 3,141,696 individuals by linking several Swedish nationwide registers. We identified 35,461 individuals with ASD and 61,784 individuals with obesity. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the association between ASD and obesity separately by ID and sex and by adjusting for parental education, psychiatric comorbidity, and psychotropic medication. Potential shared familial etiologic factors were examined by comparing the risk of obesity in full siblings, maternal and paternal half-siblings, and full- and half-cousins of individuals with ASD to the risk of obesity in relatives of individuals without ASD.

Results: individuals with ASD + ID (OR = 3.76 [95% CI, 3.38-4.19]) and ASD-ID (OR = 3.40 [95% CI, 3.23-3.58]) had an increased risk for obesity compared with individuals without ASD. The associations remained statistically significant when adjusting for parental education, psychiatric comorbidity, and medication. Sex-stratified analyses indicated a higher relative risk for males compared with females, with statistically significant interaction effects for ASD-ID, but not for ASD+ID in the fully adjusted model. First-degree relatives of individuals with ASD+ID and ASD-ID had an increased risk of obesity compared with first-degree relatives of individuals without ASD. The obesity risk was similar in second-degree relatives of individuals with ASD+ID but was lower for and ASD-ID. Full cousins of individuals with ASD+ID had a higher risk compared with half-cousins of individuals with ASD+ID). A similar difference in the obesity risk between full cousins and half-cousins was observed for ASD-ID.

Conclusions: individuals with ASD and their relatives are at increased risk for obesity. The risk might be somewhat higher for males than females. This warrants further studies examining potential common pleiotropic genetic factors and shared family-wide environmental factors for ASD and obesity. Such research might aid in identifying specific risks and underlying mechanisms in common between ASD and obesity.
890-899
Ahlberg, Richard
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Garcia-Argibay, Miguel
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Hirvikoski, Tatja
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Boman, Marcus
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Chen, Qi
b409ee8d-8a09-4553-930c-8bad81d6ede4
Taylor, Mark J.
43f8a714-b5ee-4ec9-8238-41ef3bce4283
Frans, Emma
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Bölte, Sven
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Larsson, Henrik
1d1c897c-ad54-4ffc-bf84-46b2a57f5bf4
Ahlberg, Richard
f3d33be5-fa2f-42e0-b45a-065e81048afd
Garcia-Argibay, Miguel
e5a6941e-4dcc-401a-9de4-09557c8856ef
Hirvikoski, Tatja
c994ba56-d1c5-4071-82f1-5e035011d723
Boman, Marcus
72dd1457-b1cd-4e7d-9ad0-0a509bb60fb1
Chen, Qi
b409ee8d-8a09-4553-930c-8bad81d6ede4
Taylor, Mark J.
43f8a714-b5ee-4ec9-8238-41ef3bce4283
Frans, Emma
a0b17f1e-a631-4d3d-b2e3-86f9fbac139d
Bölte, Sven
1cc87f1a-18f1-4c73-aebc-8793e6856f85
Larsson, Henrik
1d1c897c-ad54-4ffc-bf84-46b2a57f5bf4

Ahlberg, Richard, Garcia-Argibay, Miguel, Hirvikoski, Tatja, Boman, Marcus, Chen, Qi, Taylor, Mark J., Frans, Emma, Bölte, Sven and Larsson, Henrik (2022) Shared familial risk factors between autism spectrum disorder and obesity - a register-based familial coaggregation cohort study. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 63 (8), 890-899. (doi:10.1111/jcpp.13538).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: meta-analyses suggest an association between autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and obesity, but the factors underlying this association remain unclear. This study investigated the association between ASD and obesity stratified on intellectual disability (ID). In addition, in order to gain insight into possible shared etiological factors, the potential role of shared familial liability was examined.

Method: we studied a cohort of 3,141,696 individuals by linking several Swedish nationwide registers. We identified 35,461 individuals with ASD and 61,784 individuals with obesity. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the association between ASD and obesity separately by ID and sex and by adjusting for parental education, psychiatric comorbidity, and psychotropic medication. Potential shared familial etiologic factors were examined by comparing the risk of obesity in full siblings, maternal and paternal half-siblings, and full- and half-cousins of individuals with ASD to the risk of obesity in relatives of individuals without ASD.

Results: individuals with ASD + ID (OR = 3.76 [95% CI, 3.38-4.19]) and ASD-ID (OR = 3.40 [95% CI, 3.23-3.58]) had an increased risk for obesity compared with individuals without ASD. The associations remained statistically significant when adjusting for parental education, psychiatric comorbidity, and medication. Sex-stratified analyses indicated a higher relative risk for males compared with females, with statistically significant interaction effects for ASD-ID, but not for ASD+ID in the fully adjusted model. First-degree relatives of individuals with ASD+ID and ASD-ID had an increased risk of obesity compared with first-degree relatives of individuals without ASD. The obesity risk was similar in second-degree relatives of individuals with ASD+ID but was lower for and ASD-ID. Full cousins of individuals with ASD+ID had a higher risk compared with half-cousins of individuals with ASD+ID). A similar difference in the obesity risk between full cousins and half-cousins was observed for ASD-ID.

Conclusions: individuals with ASD and their relatives are at increased risk for obesity. The risk might be somewhat higher for males than females. This warrants further studies examining potential common pleiotropic genetic factors and shared family-wide environmental factors for ASD and obesity. Such research might aid in identifying specific risks and underlying mechanisms in common between ASD and obesity.

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 December 2021
Published date: 21 July 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488770
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488770
PURE UUID: d6076230-4146-4a29-be7c-6e11194cf607
ORCID for Miguel Garcia-Argibay: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4811-2330

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Date deposited: 05 Apr 2024 16:38
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:15

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Contributors

Author: Richard Ahlberg
Author: Miguel Garcia-Argibay ORCID iD
Author: Tatja Hirvikoski
Author: Marcus Boman
Author: Qi Chen
Author: Mark J. Taylor
Author: Emma Frans
Author: Sven Bölte
Author: Henrik Larsson

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