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Link between parents’ and children’s weight is mostly genetic, study finds

An analysis of 86,000 Norwegian children found that the association between parental and childhood body weight is largely explained by shared genetics

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PLOS

Link between parents’ and children’s weight is mostly genetic, study finds

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Researchers assess the genetic link between parents’ and children’s body mass index.

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Credit: freestocks, Unsplash (CC0, https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)

The association between parents’ body mass index (BMI) and their children's childhood BMI may be primarily due to genetic inheritance rather than to any direct biological effect of parental weight during pregnancy, according to a new study published June 23rd in the open access journal PLOS Medicine by Tom Bond of the University of Bristol, UK, and colleagues from the University of Queensland, Australia and more.

Higher parental BMI is consistently associated with higher childhood BMI. It has been difficult for researchers to disentangle how much of this association is due to genetics and how much is due to biological effects of maternal weight during pregnancy. This may have implications for interventions that aim to control childhood BMI by targeting pre-conception parental weight.

In the new study, researchers analyzed data from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study, a prospective birth cohort of children born between 1999 and 2009. Data on 86,000 children, including their birth weight and BMI from six months to eight years of age, as well as appetite-related eating behaviors at age eight, was available in the dataset. The researchers looked at twin, sibling, and half-sibling relationships across multiple generations to directly quantify how much of the parent-child BMI association could be attributed to genetic confounding.

Maternal BMI was more strongly associated with offspring birth weight than paternal BMI, consistent with an effect of maternal body weight on birthweight through the environment inside the uterus. However, after birth the associations of maternal and paternal BMI with offspring BMI were broadly similar from age two to eight. Models showed that genetic effects explained an estimated 79% of the statistical association between a mother’s BMI and her child’s BMI at age 8, and 94% of the association for fathers. Higher parental BMI was also associated with obesity-related eating behaviors in children, including greater food responsiveness and emotional overeating, although the study was not able to conclusively determine how much of this was genetically driven.

The authors caution that these findings do not support the idea that childhood obesity is inevitable for children of heavier parents. Children who inherit a genetic predisposition to higher BMI may still express those genes differently depending on their environment. The results also do not argue against the importance of maternal health in pregnancy, the authors say. Maternal obesity is well established to increase risk of adverse perinatal outcomes for both mother and child.

“Our results may have important public health implications, when considered alongside prior evidence,” they write. “Maternal BMI may be unlikely to have a large causal effect on child BMI beyond birth… and any causal effect of paternal BMI on offspring childhood BMI is likely to be similar to or smaller than that of maternal BMI. Consequently, reductions in the BMI of either parent before pregnancy may be unlikely to cause large reductions in childhood adiposity.”

Tom Bond states, “Obesity runs in families, but it is difficult to work out why this is. Our results suggest that the link between a mother's or father's body mass index (BMI) and their children's BMI up to age 8 is mostly due to inherited genes. Expectant parents should be encouraged to maintain a healthy weight, but this may not be enough to ensure that their children also have a healthy weight.”

David Evans notes, “We were interested in examining whether obesity in mothers during pregnancy might also have adverse effects on the risk of obesity in their offspring when the children get older. We found that whilst maternal body mass index during pregnancy was likely to adversely affect offspring birthweight, it didn’t appear to have large effects on risk of offspring obesity in later life beyond that explained through the transmission of genes from mothers to their offspring.”

Alexandra Havdahl adds, “Our findings suggest that the link between parents’ and children’s body mass index is driven largely by shared genes rather than by the intrauterine environment or parenting behavior.”

 

In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Medicine: https://plos.io/4wdkkRF  

Citation: Bond TA, McAdams TA, Warrington NM, Hannigan LJ, Eilertsen EM, Ayorech Z, et al. (2026) Parental body mass index and offspring childhood body size and eating behaviour: A structural equation modelling analysis in the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study. PLoS Med 23(6): e1005094. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1005094

Author countries: Australia, United Kingdom, Norway

Funding: see manuscript


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