Researchers have quantified the role of obesity in common long-term conditions, showing for the first time the effect of losing weight in preventing multiple diseases.
Conditions that often occur together may share an underlying cause, which can be key to prevention or treatment. The picture of which conditions co-occur is complex, so researchers paired them together, to allow them to identify shared causes more simply. The study found that obesity is the main shared cause between ten pairs of commonly occurring conditions.
The research specifically measured how much weight reduction would reduce the risk of the next diagnosis. In the largest study of its kind, published in Communications Medicine - Nature , the team led by the University of Exeter Medical School studied 71 conditions which often occur together, such as type 2 diabetes and osteoarthritis, or kidney disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
The GEMINI study, funded by the UKRI Medical Research Council and supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), used genetics and healthcare data drawn from a number of large datasets internationally. They found that obesity was part of the cause for 61 of the 71 conditions. They also found that obesity explained all of the genetic overlap in ten pairs of conditions, suggesting it is the main driver for why they frequently occur together.
Body mass index, or BMI, is a scaled measure of weight – a number over 30 units indicates obesity, while less than 25 indicates “normal” weight. The study quantified how much a reduction in BMI would reduce the risk of both conditions at a population level for people overweight or living with obesity. For example, for every thousand people who have both chronic kidney disease and osteoarthritis, a BMI reduction of 4.5 units would have prevented 17 of them developing both conditions or nine people per thousand with type 2 diabetes and osteoarthritis.
The team also established the pairs of conditions where obesity is not the main cause and are now investigating other mechanisms.
Study lead Professor Jack Bowden, at the University of Exeter Medical School: “We’ve long known that certain diseases often occur together, and also that obesity increases the risk of many diseases. This largescale study is the first to use genetics to quantify the role of obesity in causing diseases to occur in the same individuals. We found that for some disease pairings, obesity is the major driving force. Our research provides much more detail about the links between obesity and disease, which will help clinicians target specific advice to patients going forward.”
Study author Professor Jane Masoli, of the University of Exeter Medical School, who is a Consultant Geriatrician and regional NIHR Ageing lead, said: “Currently nine million people in the UK live with two or more long-term conditions. Understanding how to prevent diseases accumulating is a key national research and healthcare priority. This study further strengthens the case to tackle obesity through public health programmes, reinforcing the importance of lifelong obesity management in the NHS strategy on prevention. Our work shows that this could reduce the risk of accumulating multiple health conditions, supporting people to live longer, healthier lives.”
This research represents another important publication from the GEMINI (Genetic Evaluation of Multimorbidity towards INdividualisation of Interventions) collaborative. Led by the University of Exeter, GEMINI includes people with multimorbidity, health care professionals including those in primary care and experts in statistics and genetics, and was one of six programmes funded by the UKRI strategic priorities fund, an £830 million investment in multimorbidity research.
The GEMINI team are working to further understand why some conditions more frequently co-occur in the same patients. The team are quantifying the role of other, known modifiable risk factors beyond obesity, and are finding novel genes and pathways that could point to new ways to intervene and improve health. GEMINI data, results, and code are free to download ( https://github.com/GEMINI-multimorbidity ), and the pairwise genetic and observational correlations can be viewed interactively ( https://gemini-multimorbidity.shinyapps.io/atlas/ ).
The study was supported by NIHR through: The NIHR Biomedical Research Centre (BRC); IHR Applied Research Collaboration South West Peninsula ; the NIHR Healthtech Research Centre in Sustainable Innovation; the NIHR Leicester BRC and NIHR Oxford BRC, and and NIHR Advanced Fellowship.
The study is titled ‘ Genetics identifies obesity as a shared risk factor for co-occurring multiple long-term conditions ’, and freely available at Communications Medicine - Nature
Communications Medicine
Observational study
People
Genetics identifies obesity as a shared risk factor for co-occurring multiple longterm conditions
4-Feb-2026