| Literature DB >> 30001359 |
Maarit Piirtola1,2, Aline Jelenkovic1,3, Antti Latvala2,4, Reijo Sund1,5, Chika Honda6, Fujio Inui6,7, Mikio Watanabe6, Rie Tomizawa6, Yoshinori Iwatani6, Juan R Ordoñana8,9, Juan F Sánchez-Romera9,10, Lucia Colodro-Conde8,11, Adam D Tarnoki12,13, David L Tarnoki12,13, Nicholas G Martin11, Grant W Montgomery11, Sarah E Medland11, Finn Rasmussen14, Per Tynelius14, Qihua Tan15, Dongfeng Zhang16, Zengchang Pang17, Esther Rebato3, Maria A Stazi18, Corrado Fagnani18, Sonia Brescianini18, Andreas Busjahn19, Jennifer R Harris20, Ingunn Brandt20, Thomas Sevenius Nilsen20, Tessa L Cutler21, John L Hopper21,22, Robin P Corley23, Brooke M Huibregtse23, Joohon Sung22,24, Jina Kim22, Jooyeon Lee22, Sooji Lee22, Margaret Gatz25,26, David A Butler27, Carol E Franz28, William S Kremen28,29, Michael J Lyons30, Patrik K E Magnusson26, Nancy L Pedersen26, Anna K Dahl Aslan26,31, Sevgi Y Öncel32, Fazil Aliev33,34, Catherine A Derom35,36, Robert F Vlietinck35, Ruth J F Loos37, Judy L Silberg38, Hermine H Maes39, Dorret I Boomsma40, Thorkild I A Sørensen41,42, Tellervo Korhonen2,4, Jaakko Kaprio2,4, Karri Silventoinen1,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smokers tend to weigh less than never smokers, while successful quitting leads to an increase in body weight. Because smokers and non-smokers may differ in genetic and environmental family background, we analysed data from twin pairs in which the co-twins differed by their smoking behaviour to evaluate if the association between smoking and body mass index (BMI) remains after controlling for family background. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30001359 PMCID: PMC6042712 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart of the CODATwins dataset (n = 156,593 twin individuals and 30,014 pairwise comparisons in smoking discordant same-sexed twin pairs) included in the study.
BMI = body mass index; MZ = monozygotic.
Descriptive statistics of age and BMI (kg/m2) by smoking status over time between 1960 and 2012 in 156,593 twin individuals (80,384 men; 76,210 women) with 30,014 smoking discordant pairwise measurements in the CODATwins database.
| Time period | Number of BMI/ | Age | BMI by smoking status | Number of smoking discordant pairs and/or pairwise comparisons | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | mean (SD) | n (%) | mean (SD) | n (%) | mean (SD) | ||||
| 1960–69 | 10,460 | 44.1 (2.9) | 2,806 (27) | 25.2 (2.7) | 4,996 (48) | 24.5 (2.8) | 2,658 (25) | 25.2 (2.6) | 1,792 |
| 1970–79 | 27,168 | 34.8 (11.7) | 10,014 (37) | 23.4 (2.9) | 10,756 (40) | 23.4 (2.9) | 6,398 (24) | 24.2 (3.0) | 4,740 |
| 1980–89 | 30,338 | 45.2 (15.4) | 10,401 (34) | 24.3 (3.0) | 9,686 (32) | 24.0 (3.1) | 10,251 (34) | 25.3 (3.1) | 4,274 |
| 1990–99 | 22,348 | 46.1 (14.3) | 9,918 (44) | 24.6 (3.2) | 5,877 (26) | 24.8 (3.3) | 6,553 (29) | 25.9 (3.2) | 2,301 |
| 2000–12 | 28,419 | 44.0 (14.1) | 13,475 (47) | 25.2 (3.5) | 7,381 (26) | 25.0 (3.7) | 7,563 (27) | 26.5 (3.8) | 3,204 |
| 1960–2012 | 118,733 | 42.6 (14.0) | 46,614 (39) | 24.5 (3.2) | 38,696 (33) | 24.2 (3.2) | 33,423 (28) | 25.5 (3.3) | 16,311 |
| 1970–79 | 26,604 | 33.6 (11.5) | 14,945 (56) | 22.5 (3.4) | 8,484 (32) | 21.2 (2.8) | 3,175 (12) | 21.8 (3.0) | 3,957 |
| 1980–89 | 27,829 | 39.4 (13.8) | 15,046 (54) | 23.2 (3.8) | 7,750 (28) | 22.0 (3.3) | 5,033 (18) | 22.7 (3.7) | 3,798 |
| 1990–99 | 24,004 | 48.3 (12.9) | 13,286 (55) | 24.3 (3.9) | 5,565 (23) | 23.4 (3.7) | 5,153 (21) | 24.3 (3.9) | 2,515 |
| 2000–12 | 33,207 | 43.8 (13.9) | 18,865 (57) | 23.9 (4.3) | 7,559 (23) | 23.7 (4.2) | 6,784 (20) | 24.6 (4.2) | 3,433 |
| 1960–2012 | 111,645 | 41.2 (14.1) | 62,142 (56) | 23.5 (4.0) | 29,358 (26) | 22.5 (3.7) | 20,145 (18) | 23.6 (4.0) | 13,703 |
a Total number of BMI/smoking measurements from 1960–2012. Some individuals were included multiple times in the data (i.e., in several 10-year periods).
b Only one smoking status and BMI measurement for each individual per each 10-year time period.
c Number of twin pairs (both dizygotic and monozygotic pairs) discordant for their smoking status per a 10-year time period. A pair could be included only once for each 10-year period.
d Total number of smoking discordant pairwise measurements for 1960–2012. Note, each twin pair could be either concordant for smoking (i.e., same smoking status within a pair) or discordant for smoking (status differed within a pair: current-never, former-never, former-current) during each 10-year period. This number includes all discordant pairwise measurements/comparisons during 1960–2012.
BMI = body mass index; SD = standard deviation
Fig 2Associations (expressed by regression coefficients with 95% CIs, BMI units (kg/m2)) of current smoking with BMI compared to never smokers (reference) in twin individuals (n = 156,593) and same-sex twin pairs (DZ or MZ pairs) discordant for their smoking status (m = 10,128 pairwise measurements) by sex and time period from the CODATwins database, 1960–2012.
BMI = body mass index; CI = confidence interval; DZ = dizygotic; MZ = monozygotic.
Fig 3Associations (expressed by regression coefficients with 95% CIs, BMI units (kg/m2)) of former smoking with BMI compared to current smokers (reference) in twin individuals (n = 156,593) and same-sex twin pairs (DZ or MZ pairs) discordant for their smoking status (m = 10,551 pairwise measurements) by sex and time period from the CODATwins database, 1960–2012.
BMI = body mass index; CI = confidence interval; DZ = dizygotic; MZ = monozygotic.
Fig 4Associations (expressed by regression coefficients with 95% CIs, BMI units (kg/m2)) of former smoking with BMI compared to never smokers (reference) in twin individuals (n = 156,593) and same-sex twin pairs (DZ or MZ pairs) discordant for their smoking status (m = 9,336 pairwise measurements) by sex and time period from the CODATwins database, 1960–2012.
BMI = body mass index; CI = confidence interval; DZ = dizygotic; MZ = monozygotic.