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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Dev Psychopathol. 2021 Aug;33(3):803–820. doi: 10.1017/S0954579420000061

Table 3.

Regression Analysis showing the Association of Childhood Adversity, Genetic Risk and their Interaction with ΔBMI

ΔBMI
Model 1 β [95% CI] Model 2 β [95% CI]
Main effect
 Childhood Adversity .164** [.073, .258] .150** [.063, .241]
 GRSO 137** [.053, .224] .014 [−.112,.157]
Two-way interaction
 Childhood Adversity × GRSO .167** [.023,.292]
Control variables
 Gender −.128** [−.209, −.038] −.122** [−.201,−.030]
 Childhood Socioeconomic Status −.004 [−.096, .079] .004 [−.086, .087]
 Depression at Age 29 .345** [.233,.434] .345** [.233,.434]
Constant −.070 [−.267,.131] −.076 [−.275,.128]

Note:

**

p ≤ .01;

*

p ≤ .05 (two-tailed tests); n = 412. CI = Confidence interval; BMI = Body mass index. GRSO = Genetic risk score for obesity.