| Literature DB >> 22110724 |
Kevin R Fontaine1, Henry T Robertson, Claus Holst, Renee Desmond, Albert J Stunkard, Thorkild I A Sørensen, David B Allison.
Abstract
We attempt to elucidate whether there might be a causal connection between the socioeconomic status (SES) of the rearing environment and obesity in the offspring using data from two large-scale adoption studies: (1) The Copenhagen Adoption Study of Obesity (CASO), and (2) The Survey of Holt Adoptees and Their Families (HOLT). In CASO, the SES of both biological and adoptive parents was known, but all children were adopted. In HOLT, only the SES of the rearing parents was known, but the children could be either biological or adopted. After controlling for relevant covariates (e.g., adoptee age at measurement, adoptee age at transfer, adoptee sex) the raw (unstandardized) regression coefficients for adoptive and biological paternal SES on adoptee body mass index (BMI: kg/m(2)) in CASO were -.22 and -.23, respectively, both statistically significant (p = 0.01). Controlling for parental BMI (both adoptive and biological) reduced the coefficient for biological paternal SES by 44% (p = .034) and the coefficient for adoptive paternal SES by 1%. For HOLT, the regression coefficients for rearing parent SES were -.42 and -.25 for biological and adoptive children, respectively. Controlling for the average BMI of the rearing father and mother (i.e., mid-parental BMI) reduced the SES coefficient by 47% in their biological offspring (p≤.0001), and by 12% in their adoptive offspring (p = .09). Thus, despite the differing structures of the two adoption studies, both suggest that shared genetic diathesis and direct environmental transmission contribute about equally to the association between rearing SES and offspring BMI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22110724 PMCID: PMC3218016 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Differences in two study designs.
Overview of the Datasets Used in the Analysis.
| Characteristic | Copenhagen Adoption Study of Obesity (CASO) | Survey of Holt Adoptees and Their Families (HOLT) |
| Dates of Study | 1924–1947 | 2004–2006 |
| Adiposity Indicator | Body mass index (BMI) | Body mass index (BMI) |
| Socioeconomic Status (SES) Measures | Occupational prestige scores | Income and education |
| Country | Denmark | USA |
| Total number of family units in the analyses | 831 | 1,207 |
| Race of adoptees | European/Danish | Korean-American |
| Adopted Offspring (N) | 831 | 1,690 |
| Biological offspring of parents in rearing household (N) | 0 | 1,196 |
| Adoptive/Rearing parents (N) | 1,637 | 2,414 |
| Biological Parents (N) | 1,493 | 0 |
Descriptive Statistics of the Datasets Used* (before imputation).
| Dataset | Variable | Adopted Offspring | Biological offspring of parents in rearing household | Adoptive/Rearing parents | Biological Parents |
|
| N | 831 | 0 | 827 mothers 811 fathers | 817 mothers 723 fathers |
| Age, mean (sd) | 45.1 (8.3) | N/A | 33.5 (5.7) – mother 36.0 (6.5) – father | 24.3 (5.5) – mother 29.3 (8.6) – father | |
| Sex, % female | 56.4% | N/A | 50% | 50% | |
| BMI, mean (sd) | 25.0 (5.5) | N/A | 24.1 (4.0) – mother 25.3 (3.3) – father | 23.9 (4.4) – mother 25.1 (3.6) – father | |
| Obesity (BMI ≥30) | 21.0% | N/A | 7.8% - mother 7.4% - father | 7.9% - mother 8.2% - father | |
|
| N | 1690 | 1196 | 2414 | 0 |
| Age, mean (sd) | 28.2 (4.6) | 32.3 (5.1) | 59.6 (6.3) – mother 62.1 (7.0) -father | N/A | |
| Sex, % female | 70.5% | 37.8% | 50% | N/A | |
| BMI, mean (sd) | 23.1 (3.7) | 24.0 (4.0) | 25.6 (4.9) mother 27.4 (4.2) father | N/A | |
| Obesity (BMI ≥30) | 5.8% | N/A | 16.0% - mother 21.5% - father | N/A |
*For CASO, because of the sampling procedure used, the sample proportions reported in this row are valid descriptors of the sample utilized, but not of the population from which the sample was drawn. In the population overall, the prevalence of obesity was roughly 4% at the time the data were collected [14].
Figure 2Effect of SES on biological and adopted children in the CASO and HOLT studies.