親の肥満が子の肝疾患リスクに関連(A risk factor for liver disease: your parent’s body weight)

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2026-02-24 ワシントン大学セントルイス校

Washington University in St. Louisの研究チームは、親の体重が子どもの肝疾患リスクに影響する可能性を示した。動物モデルおよび臨床データ解析から、親の肥満が代謝経路や遺伝子発現制御に長期的変化を与え、次世代で脂肪肝や肝機能異常の発症リスクを高めることが示唆された。これは単なる生活習慣の共有だけでなく、エピジェネティックな機構を介した影響の可能性を示すものである。成果は肝疾患予防における家族単位の介入や、早期リスク評価の重要性を強調している。

<関連情報>

親の肥満と成人児の代謝機能障害関連脂肪肝疾患リスク:英国出生コホート研究 Parental obesity and risk of metabolic dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease in adult offspring: UK birth cohort study

Stefani Tica,Chongliang Luo,Duo Ren, Xiaoyu Zong,Michael D Thompson,Janis Stoll,Brian Jesse DeBosch,Phillip I Tarr,Yin Cao
Gut  Published: February 24, 2026.
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2025-336165

親の肥満が子の肝疾患リスクに関連(A risk factor for liver disease: your parent’s body weight)

Abstract

Background Metabolic dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), the most common chronic liver disease globally, may originate early in life. While maternal obesity is linked to offspring MASLD, the roles of paternal obesity and mediation by childhood adiposity remain unclear.

Objectives This study evaluates prospective associations between pre-pregnancy biparental adiposity and offspring MASLD in adulthood.

Design We included 1933 offspring from the UK Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) to assess the associations between parental pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and odds of offspring MASLD at age 24 years. MASLD was defined as hepatic steatosis on transient elastography and ≥1 cardiometabolic risk factors. We evaluated causal mediation by childhood adiposity measures.

Results At age 24 years, 10.4% of offspring had MASLD. Pre-pregnancy maternal and paternal obesity were independently associated with an increased odds of offspring MASLD. Each 1 kg/m2 increase in maternal BMI increased the odds of MASLD by 10% (Odds Ratio [OR] 1.10, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.14), while each 1 kg/m2 increase in paternal BMI raised the odds by 9% (OR 1.09, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.13). Biparental overweight or obesity was associated with 3.73 times the odds of offspring MASLD (OR 3.73, 95% CI 2.43 to 5.73) compared with parents with a normal BMI, with 67% of this association mediated by cumulative excess childhood BMI, a defined area under the curve for BMI Z score >1 for ages 7–17 years.

Conclusions Excess parental adiposity pre-pregnancy was associated with a higher odds of offspring MASLD, mediated by cumulative excess childhood BMI, highlighting the potential of life course interventions to reduce the risk of MASLD in future generations.

医療・健康
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