EATING DISORDERS: AGE OF ONSET AND ITS ASSOCIATED GENETIC RISK FACTORS
Citation
Helena Davies, Christopher Hübel, Jonathan Kelly, Agnes Ayton, Rachel Bryant-Waugh, Molly Davies, Jessica Mundy, Janet Treasure, Gerome Breen, EATING DISORDERS: AGE OF ONSET AND ITS ASSOCIATED GENETIC RISK FACTORS, European Neuropsychopharmacology, Volume 63, 2022, Page e10,
Abstract
The age at which an eating disorder begins to develop
has important implications for the design of services
and the targeting of clinical interventions. Eating disorders
have a heritability of 16-83% and a median age of onset of
18 years. However, UK-based studies on the age of onset of
eating disorders and how this is influenced by genetics are
lacking. We investigated the age of onset of eating disorder
symptoms: binge eating (n = 6,634; 6.4% male), low weight
(n = 5,570; 3.7% male), and purging behaviour (n = 6,223;
3.2% male) in two large UK research studies (n = 8,945) for
participants from the UK Eating Disorders Genetics Initiative
(EDGI UK) and the Genetic Links to Anxiety and Depression
(GLAD) Study. Eating disorder diagnoses were algorithmderived
via self-reported responses to the ED100K questionnaire
and/or self-reported diagnoses via the Mental Health
Disorder Questionnaire. Age of onset was assessed via selfreported
age at symptom start. We regressed age of onset
on polygenic scores - calculated using PRS-CS - of ADHD,
anxiety, autism, educational attainment, bipolar disorder,
schizophrenia, BMI, and depression. The median age of onset
was younger in females than males: binge eating (18 vs.
21 years), low weight (18 vs. 20 years), and purging (16 vs.
19 years). More males reported onset older than 25 years for
binge eating (41.3% vs. 18.4%), purging (29.1% vs. 10.3%),
and low weight (33.2% vs. 17.6%), and onset below 10 years
for low weight (2.9% vs. 0.3%). Preliminary polygenic score
analyses showed that a one standard deviation increase in
the educational attainment polygenic score was nominally
significantly associated with an on average 0.41 years earlier
onset of purging (p = 0.04) and 0.52 years earlier onset
of binge eating (p = 0.01). Our study shows that eating
disorders primarily begin between the ages of 16 and
25 years. Polygenic liability to higher educational attainment
may be associated with earlier onset of certain eating
disorder symptoms. Our results highlight the need for
sufficient investment into adult clinical services, increased
awareness efforts about eating disorders in adulthood, and
early screening.
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Collections
- Eating Disorders [43]