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Study Links Early Weight Gain to Long-Term Health Risks and Lifelong Consequences - Video
Overview
Gaining extra weight in your 20s may silently shape your health-and lifespan-decades later.
A large long-term study from Lund University has found that the earlier in life people develop obesity, the higher their risk of premature death. Tracking more than 600,000 individuals between the ages of 17 and 60, researchers discovered a clear pattern: weight gain in young adulthood carries the most serious long-term consequences.
Rather than looking at weight at a single point, the study examined how it changed over time. On average, participants gained about 0.4 kg per year. But those who gained weight more rapidly—especially between ages 17 and 29—faced a significantly higher risk of dying from all causes, particularly conditions linked to obesity. Individuals who became obese in early adulthood had about a 70% higher risk of premature death compared to those who did not develop obesity by age 60.
One key reason appears to be duration. The earlier obesity begins, the longer the body is exposed to its harmful effects—such as chronic inflammation, metabolic strain, and increased risk of diseases like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Interestingly, the study found an exception among women: the timing of weight gain did not significantly change the risk of cancer-related death. Researchers suggest hormonal changes, particularly around menopause, may play a role in this difference.
A major strength of the research lies in its use of repeated, clinically measured weights over many years, making the findings more reliable than studies based on self-reported data.
The takeaway is less about exact numbers and more about the broader pattern. Early weight gain matters—and preventing obesity in younger years could have a powerful impact on long-term health. In today’s “obesogenic” environment, where unhealthy choices are often the easiest, the findings highlight the urgent need for both individual awareness and public health action.
REFERENCE: Huyen T. Le, Marisa da Silva, Louise Bennet, Ahmed Elhakeem, Christel Häggström, Ming Sun, Innocent B. Mboya, Jens Wahlström, Karl Michaëlsson, Sven Sandin, Patrik K.E. Magnusson, Ylva Trolle Lagerros, Abbas Chabok, Lena Lönnberg, Sölve Elmståhl, Karolin Isaksson, Sara Hägg, Bright I. Nwaru, Hannu Kankaanranta, Linnea Hedman, Anton Nilsson, Josef Fritz, Tanja Stocks. Weight trajectories and obesity onset between 17 and 60 years of age, and cause-specific mortality: the Obesity and Disease Development Sweden (ODDS) pooled cohort study. eClinicalMedicine, 2026; 103870 DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2026.103870


