Body dissatisfaction predicts later mental health symptoms
Higher body dissatisfaction at 16 was linked to more eating-disorder and depression symptoms in young adulthood, even after accounting for family and genetic factors.
*Longitudinal twin cohort study; Level 2b (Oxford evidence scale).
Citation
Costantini I, Eley TC, Pingault J-B, Davies NM, Bould H, Bulik CM, Krebs G, Lewis G, Lewis G, Llewellyn C, Diedrichs PC, Nicholls D, Solmi F. Longitudinal associations between adolescent body dissatisfaction, eating disorder and depressive symptoms, and body mass index: a UK twin cohort study. The Lancet Psychiatry. 2026;13:37–46.
Background
Body dissatisfaction in adolescence is linked to later mental health problems and higher weight, but it is hard to know whether these links reflect shared family and genetic factors. This study used a twin design to better separate these possibilities.
Patients
2183 UK twins (age 16 at baseline; mostly White; 60% female).
Intervention
Higher body dissatisfaction score at age 16 (self-report questions about weight and shape concerns).
Control
Lower body dissatisfaction; plus adjustment and within-pair twin comparisons.
Outcome
Eating-disorder symptoms (age 21), depressive symptoms (ages 21 and 26), and body mass index (ages 21 and 26).
Follow-up Period
5 years (to age 21) and 10 years (to age 26).
Results
| Outcome |
Adjusted change per 1-point higher body dissatisfaction |
95% confidence interval |
| Eating-disorder symptom score at age 21 (primary) |
+1.99 points |
+1.73 to +2.26 |
| Depressive symptom score at ages 21 and 26 (primary) |
+0.59 points |
+0.46 to +0.73 |
| Body mass index at ages 21 and 26 |
+0.27 kg/m² |
+0.16 to +0.38 |
In within-pair analyses, links with eating-disorder and depressive symptoms remained in identical twins; the link with body mass index was smaller and not clearly present in identical twins.
Limitations
Mostly White UK twins; self-reported measures; possible remaining confounding; overlap between exposure and eating-disorder questions; limited power for some twin comparisons.
Funding
Wellcome Trust; funder had no role in study decisions.
Clinical Application
In primary care and schools, screen and address body dissatisfaction early; prevention programs may reduce later eating-disorder and depression symptoms more than they affect weight.