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The CODATwins project: the current status and recent findings of COllaborative project of development of anthropometrical measures in twins

journal contribution
posted on 2019-12-01, 00:00 authored by K Silventoinen, A Jelenkovic, Y Yokoyama, R Sund, M Sugawara, M Tanaka, S Matsumoto, L H Bogl, D L Freitas, J A Maia, J V B Hjelmborg, S Aaltonen, M Piirtola, A Latvala, L Calais-Ferreira, V C Oliveira, P H Ferreira, F Ji, F Ning, Z Pang, Jeffrey CraigJeffrey Craig, et al.
The COllaborative project of Development of Anthropometrical measures in Twins (CODATwins) project is a large international collaborative effort to analyze individual-level phenotype data from twins in multiple cohorts from different environments. The main objective is to study factors that modify genetic and environmental variation of height, body mass index (BMI, kg/m2) and size at birth, and additionally to address other research questions such as long-term consequences of birth size. The project started in 2013 and is open to all twin projects in the world having height and weight measures on twins with information on zygosity. Thus far, 54 twin projects from 24 countries have provided individual-level data. The CODATwins database includes 489,981 twin individuals (228,635 complete twin pairs). Since many twin cohorts have collected longitudinal data, there is a total of 1,049,785 height and weight observations. For many cohorts, we also have information on birth weight and length, own smoking behavior and own or parental education. We found that the heritability estimates of height and BMI systematically changed from infancy to old age. Remarkably, only minor differences in the heritability estimates were found across cultural-geographic regions, measurement time and birth cohort for height and BMI. In addition to genetic epidemiological studies, we looked at associations of height and BMI with education, birth weight and smoking status. Within-family analyses examined differences within same-sex and opposite-sex dizygotic twins in birth size and later development. The CODATwins project demonstrates the feasibility and value of international collaboration to address gene-by-exposure interactions that require large sample sizes and address the effects of different exposures across time, geographical regions and socioeconomic status.

History

Journal

Twin research and human genetics

Volume

22

Issue

6

Season

Special Issue: Twin family registries worldwide: An important resource for scientific research

Pagination

800 - 808

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

ISSN

1832-4274

eISSN

1839-2628

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, The Author(s)