Evaluation of the Predictive Ability, Environmental Regulation and Pharmacogenetics Utility of a BMI-Predisposing Genetic Risk Score during Childhood and Puberty
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Anguita-Ruiz, Augusto; González Gil, Esther M.; Pastor-Villaescusa, Belén; Alcalá Fernández, Jesús; Gil Hernández, Ángel; Aguilera García, Concepción MaríaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Obesity Childhood obesity Metabolic syndrome Genetics Genetic risk score Pharmacogenetics Predictive ability Gene-environment interactions Puberty Childhood Spanish children
Date
2020-06-02Referencia bibliográfica
Anguita-Ruiz, A., González-Gil, E. M., Rupérez, A. I., Llorente-Cantarero, F. J., Pastor-Villaescusa, B., Alcalá-Fdez, J., ... & Leis, R. (2020). Evaluation of the Predictive Ability, Environmental Regulation and Pharmacogenetics Utility of a BMI-Predisposing Genetic Risk Score during Childhood and Puberty. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 9(6), 1705. [doi: 10.3390/jcm9061705]
Patrocinador
Plan Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica, Desarrollo e Innovacion Tecnologica (I + D + I), Instituto de Salud Carlos III-Health Research Funding (FONDOS FEDER) PI1102042 PI1102059 PI1601301 PI1600871; Spanish Ministry of Health, Social and Equality, General Department for Pharmacy and Health Products EC10-243 EC10-056 EC10-281 EC10-227; Regional Government of Andalusia ("Plan Andaluz de investigacion, desarrollo e innovacion (2018)") P18-RT-2248; Mapfre Foundation ("Research grants by Ignacio H. de Larramendi 2017"); Instituto de Salud Carlos III IFI17/00048Résumé
Polygenetic risk scores (pGRSs) consisting of adult body mass index (BMI) genetic
variants have been widely associated with obesity in children populations. The implication of
such obesity pGRSs in the development of cardio-metabolic alterations during childhood as well
as their utility for the clinical prediction of pubertal obesity outcomes has been barely investigated
otherwise. In the present study, we evaluated the utility of an adult BMI predisposing pGRS for the
prediction and pharmacological management of obesity in Spanish children, further investigating
its implication in the appearance of cardio-metabolic alterations. For that purpose, we counted
on genetics data from three well-characterized children populations (composed of 574, 96 and 124
individuals), following both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs, expanding childhood and
puberty. As a result, we demonstrated that the pGRS is strongly associated with childhood BMI
Z-Score (B = 1.56, SE = 0.27 and p-value = 1.90 × 10−8
), and that could be used as a good predictor of
obesity longitudinal trajectories during puberty. On the other hand, we showed that the pGRS is not
associated with cardio-metabolic comorbidities in children and that certain environmental factors
interact with the genetic predisposition to the disease. Finally, according to the results derived from a
weight-reduction metformin intervention in children with obesity, we discarded the utility of the
pGRS as a pharmacogenetics marker of metformin response.