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Are some kids genetically more vulnerable to food advertising?

By Reuters - Nov 02,2016 - Last updated at Nov 02,2016

Children exposed to food advertisements are more likely to overeat, especially if they have a specific version of a gene linked to obesity, a recent study suggests.

A gene known as the fat mass and obesity-associated gene, or FTO, comes in various slightly different versions, and was the first to be linked to obesity by genetic studies, the researchers wrote in the International Journal of Obesity.

These kinds of genes interacting with an environment full of junk food ads may make children more likely to reach for a snack when it’s advertised on TV, even when they’re full, putting them at even greater risk of obesity, the study team writes.

“Many people ask me why they can’t walk past a plate of brownies sitting on a table when their best friend can,” said Dr Diane Gilbert-Diamond, lead study author and assistant professor of epidemiology at Dartmouth College in Lebanon, New Hampshire.

“It’s a compelling question because it gets to the individual differences in how people respond to food,” she told Reuters Health. “Many people think it’s a matter of self-control, yet our research looks at how food cues motivate consumption.”

Previous studies have shown that food advertising on television can influence how people react to and consume food. Past research has also shown that having a high-risk version of FTO is associated with a 20 per cent higher likelihood of being obese compared to people with other versions of the gene.

In the current study, 172 children from the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock, ages 9 and 10, were tested to determine their version of the gene. Of three versions, 16 per cent of kids had the most dangerous one, 18 per cent had the version associated with the lowest obesity risk and 48 per cent had a moderate-risk version. 

In the whole group, 26 per cent of kids were obese, and those with the high-risk genotype were more likely to fall into this category, according to the report.

In the experiment, all the children were served a lunch and then randomly assigned to groups that would watch one of two versions of a 34-minute kids’ TV show embedded with eight minutes of either food or toy ads. 

The researchers gave each group of kids snack foods — gummy candy, cookies, chocolate and cheese puffs — to eat during the show and measured how many calories the children consumed. They also surveyed kids about how hungry they felt.

The kids who saw the version of the show with food ads, including one ad for gummy candy, ate an average of 48 more calories of gummies than the children who saw the toy ads. There was no difference in how much kids seeing food or toy ads ate of candies that were not advertised. Those with the high-risk version of FTO who saw the food ads were even more likely to eat the gummies, however.

In terms of extra calories consumed overall, kids with the high-risk version of the gene ate 125 more calories, compared to 59 extra calories for kids with the medium-risk version and three fewer calories among kids with the low-risk version.

“There have been a lot of attempts to understand what makes some people more or less susceptible to overeating,” said Dr Jennifer Harris, the director of marketing initiatives at the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut in Hartford. 

“The fact that these researchers made sure everyone was full before they started the experiment, as well as the genotyping, makes the effects even more compelling,” said Harris, who was not involved with the study. 

The US food industry spends $1.79 billion on marketing foods to children under 11 each year, according to the Federal Trade Commission. For average cable viewers, this could mean 15 TV food ads per day, or 5,500 per year, according to a 2010 Rudd Centre report.

“This study sets the ball rolling on an exciting avenue for research, particularly given our expanding understanding of genetic susceptibilities to obesity and the gains we’re making in knowledge of reward pathways in the brain,” said Dr Emma Boyland, a lecturer on appetite and obesity at the University of Liverpool in the UK, who was not involved in the study.

“Policy progress in the field of food marketing requires evidence of children’s vulnerability and their need for regulatory protection,” Boyland said by e-mail. 

 

“Parents should remember that even within a family, children can be different,” Dr Gilbert-Diamond said. “One child may not overeat, and the other may beg for a treat when walking past the ice cream store. Even for me as a parent, that’s hard to understand.”

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