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Shared genetic architecture between eating disorders, mental health conditions, and cardiometabolic diseases: a comprehensive population-wide study across two countries

Joeri Meijsen (), Kejia Hu, Dang Wei, Stefana Aicoboaie, Helena L. Davies, Ruyue Zhang, Mischa Lundberg, Richard Zetterberg, Joëlle Pasman, Weimin Ye, Thomas Werge, Cynthia M. Bulik, Fang Fang, Alfonso Buil and Nadia Micali ()
Additional contact information
Joeri Meijsen: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Kejia Hu: Karolinska Institutet
Dang Wei: Karolinska Institutet
Stefana Aicoboaie: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Helena L. Davies: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Ruyue Zhang: Karolinska Institutet
Mischa Lundberg: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Richard Zetterberg: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Joëlle Pasman: Karolinska Institutet
Weimin Ye: Karolinska Institutet
Thomas Werge: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Cynthia M. Bulik: Karolinska Institutet
Fang Fang: Karolinska Institutet
Alfonso Buil: Mental Health Services Copenhagen
Nadia Micali: Mental Health Services Copenhagen

Nature Communications, 2025, vol. 16, issue 1, 1-10

Abstract: Abstract Eating disorders arise from a complex interaction of genetic and environmental influences. Here we provide comprehensive population-level estimates of the heritability of eating disorders and their genetic relationships with various mental health and cardiometabolic disorders (CMDs), expanding beyond genome-wide association studies. We examined the heritability of three eating disorders—anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), and other eating disorders (OED)—and investigated shared familial and genetic risk factors with mental health disorders and CMDs. Using national register data from Denmark and Sweden (1972–2016), we analysed clinical diagnoses for over 67,000 individuals with eating disorders, their first-degree relatives, and matched controls from populations totalling 17 million. Heritability estimates were moderate, h2AN = 36%, h2BN = 39%, and h2OED = 30% and genetic correlations revealed substantial overlap between AN and obsessive-compulsive disorder (rg = 0.65) and moderate correlations with other mental health disorders such as autism (rg = 0.36). Significant genetic associations were also identified between eating disorders and CMDs, showing strong replication across both countries. These findings emphasise the genetic foundations of eating disorders and their shared genetic architecture with mental health and CMDs. This research enhances our understanding of comorbidity patterns and has important implications for developing integrated treatment approaches.

Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-61496-5

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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-61496-5

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