High Allelic Burden of Four Obesity SNPs Is Associated With Poorer Weight Loss Outcomes Following Gastric Bypass Surgery

Genome‐wide association and linkage studies have identified multiple susceptibility loci for obesity. We hypothesized that such loci may affect weight loss outcomes following dietary or surgical weight loss interventions. A total of 1,001 white individuals with extreme obesity (BMI >35 kg/m2) who...

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Veröffentlicht in:Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) Md.), 2011-08, Vol.19 (8), p.1676-1683
Hauptverfasser: Still, Christopher D., Wood, G. Craig, Chu, Xin, Erdman, Robert, Manney, Christina H., Benotti, Peter N., Petrick, Anthony T., Strodel, William E., Mirshahi, Uyenlinh L., Mirshahi, Tooraj, Carey, David J., Gerhard, Glenn S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genome‐wide association and linkage studies have identified multiple susceptibility loci for obesity. We hypothesized that such loci may affect weight loss outcomes following dietary or surgical weight loss interventions. A total of 1,001 white individuals with extreme obesity (BMI >35 kg/m2) who underwent a preoperative diet/behavioral weight loss intervention and Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass surgery were genotyped for single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in or near the fat mass and obesity‐associated (FTO), insulin induced gene 2 (INSIG2), melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R), and proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 1 (PCSK1) obesity genes. Association analysis was performed using recessive and additive models with pre‐ and postoperative weight loss data. An increasing number of obesity SNP alleles or homozygous SNP genotypes was associated with increased BMI (P < 0.0006) and excess body weight (P < 0.0004). No association between the amounts of weight lost from a short‐term dietary intervention and any individual obesity SNP or cumulative number of obesity SNP alleles or homozygous SNP genotypes was observed. Linear mixed regression analysis revealed significant differences in postoperative weight loss trajectories across groups with low, intermediate, and high numbers of obesity SNP alleles or numbers of homozygous SNP genotypes (P < 0.0001). Initial BMI interacted with genotype to influence weight loss with initial BMI
ISSN:1930-7381
1930-739X
DOI:10.1038/oby.2011.3