Department of Psychiatry, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York.
Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Int J Eat Disord. 2019 May;52(5):554-563. doi: 10.1002/eat.23040. Epub 2019 Feb 6.
The role of common and symptom-specific genetic and environmental influences in maintaining eating disorder symptoms across development remains unclear. This study investigates the continuity and change of etiological influences on drive for thinness, bulimia, and body dissatisfaction symptoms and their co-occurrence, across adolescence and emerging adulthood.
In total, 2,629 adolescent twins (mean age = 15.20, SD = 1.95) reported eating disorders symptoms across three waves of data collection. Biometric common pathways model was fitted to estimate genetic and environmental contributions to the continuity of each symptom over time, as well as time- and symptom-specific influences.
Drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction symptoms showed a pattern of high continuity across development and high correlations with each other, whereas bulimia symptoms were moderately stable and less associated with the other two symptoms. Latent factors reflecting continuity of each symptom were largely under genetic influence (A = 0.60-0.82). New genetic influences contributing to change in the developmental course of symptoms were observed in emerging adulthood. Genetic influences correlated considerably between the three symptoms. Non-shared environmental influences were largely time-and symptom-specific, but some contributed moderately to the continuity across development (E = 0.18-0.40). The etiological overlap was larger between drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction symptoms than with bulimia symptoms.
The results provide preliminary evidence that stable as well as newly emerging genetic influences contribute to the co-occurrence of drive for thinness, bulimia, and body dissatisfaction symptoms across adolescence and emerging adulthood. Conversely, environmental influences were less stable and contributed to change in symptoms over time.
共同的和特定于症状的遗传和环境影响在维持整个发展过程中的饮食障碍症状方面的作用仍不清楚。本研究调查了在青少年和成年早期,对消瘦、贪食和身体不满症状的病因影响的连续性和变化,以及它们的共同发生。
共有 2629 名青少年双胞胎(平均年龄为 15.20 岁,标准差为 1.95)在三次数据收集期间报告了饮食障碍症状。生物计量共同途径模型被用来估计遗传和环境因素对每个症状随时间的连续性的贡献,以及时间和症状特异性的影响。
消瘦和身体不满症状在整个发展过程中表现出高度的连续性和高度的相关性,而贪食症状则具有中度的稳定性,与其他两个症状的相关性较低。反映每个症状连续性的潜在因素主要受遗传影响(A 为 0.60-0.82)。在成年早期,发现了新的遗传因素,这些因素对症状发展过程中的变化有贡献。遗传影响在三个症状之间有很大的相关性。非共享的环境影响主要是时间和症状特异性的,但有些因素在整个发展过程中对连续性有适度的贡献(E 为 0.18-0.40)。消瘦和身体不满症状之间的病因重叠比贪食症状更大。
结果初步证明了稳定的和新出现的遗传因素对青少年和成年早期消瘦、贪食和身体不满症状的共同发生有贡献。相反,环境影响不太稳定,并导致症状随时间的变化。