Phenotyping children and adolescents with obesity using behavioral, psychological, and familial data

Author:

St Fleur Ruth G.1ORCID,Tanofsky‐Kraff Marian2ORCID,Yanovski Jack A.3ORCID,Horton Nicholas J.4,Hirschhorn Joel N.567,Field Alison E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology Brown University School of Public Health Providence Rhode Island USA

2. Department of Medical and Clinical Psychology Uniformed Services University of The Health Sciences Bethesda Maryland USA

3. Section on Growth and Obesity, Division of Intramural Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health Bethesda Maryland USA

4. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Amherst College Amherst Massachusetts USA

5. Program in Medical and Population Genetics, The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Cambridge Massachusetts USA

6. Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

7. Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis prospective cohort study aimed to empirically derive phenotypes of children and adolescents with overweight and obesity.MethodsLatent class analyses using Mplus were carried out in the Growing Up Today Study. Information on participants' weight status, disordered eating behaviors, body image and weight concerns, depressive symptoms, and pubertal timing, as well as and maternal weight status, were included in the latent class analyses, which were stratified by sex. Mixed‐effects regression was used to examine associations of the obesity phenotypes with adult weight gain, between age 20 and 35 years, independent of weight at beginning of follow‐up and duration of follow‐up.ResultsAmong the girls, four obesity phenotypes were identified: 1) “early puberty”; 2) “mothers with obesity”; 3) “high weight concerns”; and 4) “mixed.” Only three phenotypes were identified among the boys: 1) “high weight concerns”; 2) “mothers with obesity”; and 3) “mixed.” Participants who had overweight or obesity in childhood or adolescence gained more weight in young adulthood than their leaner peers, but the patterns of weight gain in young adulthood varied by phenotype of obesity in childhood and adolescence.ConclusionsThese results support examining risk factors for and treatment outcomes by obesity phenotypes.

Funder

Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference61 articles.

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