TY - JOUR
T1 - A twin study of self-regulatory eating in early childhood
T2 - Estimates of genetic and environmental influence, and measurement considerations
AU - Faith, M. S.
AU - Pietrobelli, A.
AU - Heo, M.
AU - Johnson, S. L.
AU - Keller, K. L.
AU - Heymsfield, S. B.
AU - Allison, D. B.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the families who enrolled in ‘Project Grow-2-gether’ for their generous and enthusiastic participation. This project was supported by the NIH grant K08-MH01530 awarded to Dr Faith. This study is funded by a grant K08 MH-01530 (MSF).
PY - 2012/7
Y1 - 2012/7
N2 - Objective: Children differ greatly in their ability to self-regulate food intake for reasons that are poorly understood. This laboratory-based twin study tested the genetic and environmental contributions to self-regulatory eating and body fat in early childhood. Methods: A total of 69 4-7 year-old same-sex twin pairs, including 40 monozygotic and 29 dizygotic pairs, were studied. Self-regulatory eating was operationalized as the percentage compensation index (COMPX%), assessed by a preload challenge in which lunch intake was measured following a low-(3 kcal) or high-calorie (159 kcal) drink. Body fat indexes also were measured. The familial association for COMPX% was estimated by an intraclass correlation, and biometric analyses estimated heritability. Results: Children ate more at lunch following the low-compared with high-energy preload (P<0.001), although variability in COMPX% was considerable. Compensation was significantly poorer among African American and Hispanic compared with European American children, and among girls compared with boys. There was a familial association for self-regulatory eating (p=0.23, P=0.03) but no significant genetic component. In all, 22% of the variance in COMPX% was due to shared environmental household factors, with the remaining variance attributable to child-specific unique or random environments. Poorer self-regulatory eating was associated with greater percent body fat (r=-0.21, P=0.04). Conclusions: Self-regulatory eating was influenced by environmental factors, especially those differing among siblings. The absence of a significant genetic effect may reflect the age of the sample or could be artifactual due to measurement issues that need to be considered in future studies.
AB - Objective: Children differ greatly in their ability to self-regulate food intake for reasons that are poorly understood. This laboratory-based twin study tested the genetic and environmental contributions to self-regulatory eating and body fat in early childhood. Methods: A total of 69 4-7 year-old same-sex twin pairs, including 40 monozygotic and 29 dizygotic pairs, were studied. Self-regulatory eating was operationalized as the percentage compensation index (COMPX%), assessed by a preload challenge in which lunch intake was measured following a low-(3 kcal) or high-calorie (159 kcal) drink. Body fat indexes also were measured. The familial association for COMPX% was estimated by an intraclass correlation, and biometric analyses estimated heritability. Results: Children ate more at lunch following the low-compared with high-energy preload (P<0.001), although variability in COMPX% was considerable. Compensation was significantly poorer among African American and Hispanic compared with European American children, and among girls compared with boys. There was a familial association for self-regulatory eating (p=0.23, P=0.03) but no significant genetic component. In all, 22% of the variance in COMPX% was due to shared environmental household factors, with the remaining variance attributable to child-specific unique or random environments. Poorer self-regulatory eating was associated with greater percent body fat (r=-0.21, P=0.04). Conclusions: Self-regulatory eating was influenced by environmental factors, especially those differing among siblings. The absence of a significant genetic effect may reflect the age of the sample or could be artifactual due to measurement issues that need to be considered in future studies.
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U2 - 10.1038/ijo.2011.258
DO - 10.1038/ijo.2011.258
M3 - Article
C2 - 22249227
AN - SCOPUS:84863723865
SN - 0307-0565
VL - 36
SP - 931
EP - 937
JO - International Journal of Obesity
JF - International Journal of Obesity
IS - 7
ER -