(Press-News.org) Pre-pregnancy parental overweight and obesity is linked to the next generation’s heightened risk of developing fatty liver disease, a potential precursor to cirrhosis and liver failure, suggests research published online in the journal Gut.
If both parents are overweight or obese before they conceive, that child’s subsequent odds of developing MASLD by the age of 24 are more than 3 times higher, most of which is influenced by cumulative excess weight (BMI) during childhood, the findings indicate.
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, recently renamed metabolic dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease, or MASLD for short, is the most common chronic liver disease worldwide, affecting an estimated 15% of children and more than 30% of adults, note the researchers.
Previously published research has emphasised the role of maternal obesity in future generations’ MASLD risk, but it’s not clear what role paternal obesity might have and if childhood overweight might also influence this risk.
To find out, the researchers assessed the associations between parental weight (BMI) before pregnancy and the odds of developing MASLD by the age of 24 in 1933 children from the UK Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC).
MASLD was defined as high levels of fat in the liver and at least 1 cardiometabolic risk factor, such as high cholesterol or high fasting glucose.
Both parents provided information on height, weight, calculated BMI and waist circumference, and they completed regular questionnaires on potentially influential health and lifestyle factors throughout pregnancy and after the birth.
These included information on age at delivery, smoking during the first 3 months of pregnancy, typical weekly alcohol consumption before pregnancy, employment status, and educational attainment.
The mums also reported their physical activity levels and whether they had ever been diagnosed with diabetes or high blood pressure at the time of study enrolment.
Information on the children included early life factors: sex; mode of delivery; gestational age and birthweight; antibiotic exposure within the first 6 months of life; and length of breastfeeding.
And it included repeated measures of BMI and waist circumference when they were aged 7–9, 10–12, and 13–17, plus alcohol and tobacco use as a young adult.
By the age of 24, one in 10 of these children (201) had MASLD; the other 1732 had a normal liver. Those with MASLD were more likely to be male and to have a higher BMI.
Maternal and paternal overweight and obesity were independently associated with increased odds of their children subsequently developing MASLD, after accounting for potentially influential factors.
Each additional kg of maternal BMI increased the odds of MASLD by 10%, while the equivalent increase in paternal BMI raised the odds by 9%.
Overweight or obesity in both parents was associated with more than 3 times the odds of their child developing MASLD as a young adult compared with those whose parents had a normal pre-pregnancy BMI.
Two thirds (67%) of this association was influenced by cumulative excess BMI between the ages of 7 and 17.
Further analysis, accounting for mothers’ and children’s sugar consumption, plus genetic predisposition to MASLD, generated similar findings.
This is an observational study, and as such, no firm conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, added to which the researchers acknowledge various limitations to their findings.
For example, parental pre-pregnancy data were self-reported and there was no information on parental MASLD, underlying conditions before and during pregnancy, or their children’s physical activity levels in early adulthood, all of which might have been influential.
Although the drivers behind the observed associations aren’t yet fully understood, the researchers nevertheless conclude that their results “lend support to an early life influence of biparental obesity on offspring metabolic health, suggesting efforts to mitigate excess adiposity of both mothers and fathers before conceiving may confer longitudinal benefits to the metabolic outcomes of their future offspring.”
END
Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease risk
Young adult risk more than 3 times higher if both mum and dad carrying excess weight; Odds largely influenced by cumulative excess weight (BMI) in childhood
2026-02-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Obstructive sleep apnoea may cost UK + US economies billions in lost productivity
2026-02-25
Untreated obstructive sleep apnoea may be costing the UK and US economies billions of pounds/dollars in lost productivity every year, with a considerable proportion of working age adults experiencing symptoms indicative of the breathing disorder, suggests an analysis published online in the journal Thorax.
Around 1 in 5 adults in both countries may have obstructive sleep apnoea, the analysis suggests. And the time has now come to trial workplace screening in those most at risk of harm from the daytime sleepiness associated ...
Guidelines set new playbook for pediatric clinical trial reporting
2026-02-25
Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), working with international collaborators and youth and family caregivers, have developed a child- and youth-centred global standard for reporting paediatric randomized controlled trials (RCTs) protocols and final reports.
Co-published today in The BMJ, JAMA Pediatrics and The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, the SPIRIT-Children and Adolescents (SPIRIT-C) 2026 and CONSORT-Children and Adolescents (CONSORT-C) 2026 guidelines introduce new recommendations to improve ...
Adolescent cannabis use may follow the same pattern as alcohol use
2026-02-25
A new study published in the journal Addiction shows that cannabis use among Swedish adolescents appears to follow the same population-level pattern previously observed for alcohol. The findings suggest that changes in average cannabis use among young people are reflected across the entire group—from those who use infrequently to those who use frequently.
The study is based on extensive data from the Swedish Council for Information on Alcohol and Other Drugs’ (CAN) national school surveys and includes more than 250,000 students aged 15-18 years (in grade ...
Lifespan-extending treatments increase variation in age at time of death
2026-02-25
A key goal in ageing research is not just to extend life, but to ensure more people live longer and healthier lives with less variation in age-at-death; a concept known as “squaring the survival curve.” Using a recent meta-analysis, Dr Tahlia Fulton and Associate Professor Alistair Senior from the University of Sydney School of Life and Environmental Sciences re-examined how dietary restriction and two related drugs, rapamycin and metformin, affect variation in age-at-death in vertebrates.
While two of the treatments increased average lifespan, all three increased variance. This means current lifespan-extending interventions do not "square ...
From ancient myths to ‘Indo-manga’: Artists in the Global South are reframing the comic
2026-02-25
Since their so-called “Golden Age” in the 1940s, comics have often been treated as a universal visual language: stories told in panels and speech bubbles that function much the same wherever they appear.
Now, a new volume of comics studies is challenging that assumption. Comics and the Global South brings together work from Latin America, Africa, Asia and beyond to argue that comics from these regions need to be read on their own cultural terms. Doing so, the book suggests, will unsettle long-held ...
Putting some ‘muscle’ into material design
2026-02-24
By Leah Shaffer
Natural muscle fibers are made up of spring-like proteins that can contract and stretch without losing their original form, dissipate mechanical energy as heat and maintain incredible tensile strength for all sorts of physical functions. Engineers at Washington University in St. Louis have replicated these proteins using synthetic biology approaches to create a new category of biomaterials for use in medicine, textiles and agriculture.
“Many muscle proteins share similar immunoglobulin-like structures while bearing diverse amino acid sequences. These natural materials provide great ...
House fires release harmful compounds into the air
2026-02-24
Wildfires have increased in frequency and severity over the past few decades. More fires are burning at the wildland-urban interface (WUI), where homes and other buildings meet the natural landscape — but our understanding of emissions from structure fires is still growing.
New research led by the University of Colorado Boulder's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) shows that common synthetic materials used in homes, like plastics and insulation, can release harmful compounds into the air when they burn.
But synthetic materials make up only a small fraction of a home. Timber and wood ...
Novel structural insights into Phytophthora effectors challenge long-held assumptions in plant pathology
2026-02-24
How do evolutionarily conserved pathogen effectors maintain structural stability while engaging diverse host targets? In a new study published in Molecular Plant Microbe Interactions® (MPMI), researchers at the University of Pretoria’s Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI) define a conserved subset of Phytophthora RxLR effectors in which short linear motifs (SLiMs) are embedded within folded WY domain cores.
Phytophthora species rank among the world’s most destructive plant pathogens, causing ...
Q&A: Researchers discuss potential solutions for the feedback loop affecting scientific publishing
2026-02-24
Scientists share their work by publishing articles in journals, such as Nature, Science or PLOS Biology. One major part of the publishing process involves having these manuscripts reviewed by unpaid peers. These scientists specialize in the same topic and volunteer to make sure the science is sound and the authors haven't missed anything critical in their data analysis.
The peer review process has reached a critical point where there are too many manuscript submissions and not enough peer reviewers. Carl Bergstrom, University of Washington professor of biology, and ...
A new ecological model highlights how fluctuating environments push microbes to work together
2026-02-24
Depending on others for something you need may feel like a risky proposition—and perhaps a human one. It is actually a survival strategy found in the microbial world, and far more frequently than one might expect. Discovering why is key to understanding how microbes form stable communities across medical, industrial, and ecological settings.
A new study by bioengineering professor Sergei Maslov, computational scientist Ashish George, and biology professor Tong Wang explores why interdependence can be such a winning move for microbial communities. Their work, published this week in Cell Systems , demonstrated ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimpanzees
Barshop Institute to receive up to $38 million from ARPA-H, anchoring UT San Antonio as a national leader in aging and healthy longevity science
Anion-cation synergistic additives solve the "performance triangle" problem in zinc-iodine batteries
Ancient diets reveal surprising survival strategies in prehistoric Poland
Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease risk
Obstructive sleep apnoea may cost UK + US economies billions in lost productivity
Guidelines set new playbook for pediatric clinical trial reporting
Adolescent cannabis use may follow the same pattern as alcohol use
Lifespan-extending treatments increase variation in age at time of death
From ancient myths to ‘Indo-manga’: Artists in the Global South are reframing the comic
Putting some ‘muscle’ into material design
House fires release harmful compounds into the air
Novel structural insights into Phytophthora effectors challenge long-held assumptions in plant pathology
Q&A: Researchers discuss potential solutions for the feedback loop affecting scientific publishing
A new ecological model highlights how fluctuating environments push microbes to work together
Chapman University researcher warns of structural risks at Grand Renaissance Dam putting property and lives in danger
Courtship is complicated, even in fruit flies
Columbia announces ARPA-H contract to advance science of healthy aging
New NYUAD study reveals hidden stress facing coral reef fish in the Arabian Gulf
36 months later: Distance learning in the wake of COVID-19
Blaming beavers for flood damage is bad policy and bad science, Concordia research shows
The new ‘forever’ contaminant? SFU study raises alarm on marine fiberglass pollution
Shorter early-life telomere length as a predictor of survival
Why do female caribou have antlers?
How studying yeast in the gut could lead to new, better drugs
Chemists thought phosphorus had shown all its cards. It surprised them with a new move
A feedback loop of rising submissions and overburdened peer reviewers threatens the peer review system of the scientific literature
Rediscovered music may never sound the same twice, according to new Surrey study
Ochsner Baton Rouge expands specialty physicians and providers at area clinics and O’Neal hospital
New strategies aim at HIV’s last strongholds
[Press-News.org] Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease riskYoung adult risk more than 3 times higher if both mum and dad carrying excess weight; Odds largely influenced by cumulative excess weight (BMI) in childhood