Genetics has part to play in kids’ weight
Growing Up in NZ study sheds new light on high rates of obesity
Genetics has a part to play in obesity, new research has found. A genetic variant has been linked to increases in the height, weight and waist circumference of 4-year-olds, one of the findings the Growing Up in New Zealand study has shown.
The research has found the variant in the CREBRF gene, which was previously thought to be present only in Samoans, was more common in the Maori and Pacific Island children in the study compared with the European and Asian children.
Lead author Dr Sarah Berry said the findings shed new light on New Zealand’s high rates of obesity and how to deal with it.
In 2015/2016, 32 per cent of adults were obese, up from 27 per cent in 2006/07, and one in nine children aged 2-14 years was obese.
The study of 5000 children, led by University of Auckland researchers, found those with the gene variant, particularly boys, were more
The effect of the gene is becoming more apparent as time goes on.
likely to be heavier and taller than others at age 4.
Those children were about 400g heavier than the other children, almost 1cm taller and had a waist circumference almost 1cm larger.
Berry said the increase in weight was significant given the average weight of a 4-year-old was 19-20kg.
She said the findings also suggested that, while genetics played a part, a child’s environment could change the effect of the gene variant.
There was no difference in size among children with the CREBRF variant when they were born or when they were 2, which suggested diet and activity levels could play a part — although more research was needed to prove that, she said.
“What we are seeing is the effect of the gene becoming more apparent as time goes on. We could hypothesise that that’s because of changes in the environment,” Berry said.
She said the research was important for the country because it could help shape the focus of policies on factors that would make the most difference.
“Our research represents an important step toward understanding the interactions between our diet, lifestyle, and genetic make-up,” Berry said.
“Being able to look at anonymous, population-level data from Growing Up in New Zealand provides us with the unique opportunity to figure out why people are the way they are, and to create new opportunities for improving health outcomes.”
She said the new knowledge offered the chance to implement evidence-based interventions aimed at establishing healthy growth from the earliest possible age.
Dr Sarah Berry, researcher