Risk of parental major psychiatric disorders in patients with comorbid autism spectrum disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: A population-based family-link study.

Tien-Wei Hsu, Ya-Mei Bai, Shih-Jen Tsai, Tzeng-Ji Chen, Chih-Sung Liang, Mu-Hong Chen
Author Information
  1. Tien-Wei Hsu: Department of Psychiatry, Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital, Kaohsiung.
  2. Ya-Mei Bai: Department of Psychiatry, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei.
  3. Shih-Jen Tsai: Department of Psychiatry, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei.
  4. Tzeng-Ji Chen: Department of Family Medicine, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei.
  5. Chih-Sung Liang: Department of Psychiatry, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei. ORCID
  6. Mu-Hong Chen: Department of Psychiatry, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei. ORCID

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Few studies have investigated the parental risk of major psychiatric disorders among patients with comorbid autism spectrum disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. This study examined the differences in such risk among patients with autism spectrum disorder-only, with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder-only and both conditions.
METHODS: Between 2001 and 2011, we enrolled 132,624 patients with autism spectrum disorder or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and 1:10 matched controls for age, sex and demographics from the National Health Insurance Database of Taiwan. Poisson regression models were used to examine the risk of five major psychiatric disorders in the patients' parents compared with those of the controls, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, alcohol use disorder, and substance use disorder. patients were classified into the autism spectrum disorder-only, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder-only and dual-diagnosis groups.
RESULTS: The parents of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder-only and dual-diagnosis groups had a higher likelihood to be diagnosed with (odds ratios [95% confidence intervals]) schizophrenia (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: 1.48 [1.39, 1.57]; dual: 1.79 [1.45, 1.20]), bipolar disorder (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: 1.91 [1.82, 2.01]; dual: 1.81 [1.51, 2.17]), major depressive disorder (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: 1.94 [1.89, 2.00]; dual: 1.99 [1.81, 2.20]), alcohol use disorder (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: 1.39 [1.33, 1.45]; dual: 1.20 [1.01, 1.42]) and substance use disorder (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: 1.66 [1.59, 1.73]; dual: 1.34 [1.13, 1.58]) than the controls. In contrast, the parents of autism spectrum disorder-only group had a higher likelihood to be diagnosed with schizophrenia (1.77 [1.46, 2.15]) and major depressive disorder (1.45 [1.32, 1.61]) and a lower likelihood to be diagnosed with alcohol use disorder (0.68 [0.55, 0.84]) than the controls.
CONCLUSION: The autism spectrum disorder-only group had a different parental incidence of major psychiatric disorders than the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder-only and dual-diagnosis groups. Our findings have implications for clinical practice and future genetic research.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Depressive Disorder, Major
Alcoholism
Parents

Word Cloud

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