Alcohol dependence in men: reliability and heritability.

Eivind Ystrom, Ted Reichborn-Kjennerud, Steven H Aggen, Kenneth S Kendler
Author Information
  1. Eivind Ystrom: Department of Adult Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway. eivind.ystrom@fhi.no

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The assessment of a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) life-time history of alcohol dependence (LTH-AD) has been found to be moderately reliable and substantially heritable. However, in studies of the heritability of LTH-AD, measurement error could not be discriminated from the true unique environmental effects. The aims of this study were to: (i) estimate the reliability of LTH-AD in a population based sample, (ii) identify characteristics of LTH-AD predicting a reliable diagnosis, (iii) investigate the heritability of LTH-AD as a function of diagnostic confidence, and (iv) to estimate the genetic and environmental influences on LTH-AD correcting for measurement error.
METHODS: An unselected sample of 4,203 male twins was interviewed twice approximately 1-year apart assessing DSM-IV LTH-AD over the same period of life. Logistic regression was used to identify clinical features that predict a reliable diagnosis LTH-AD. Genetic and environmental influences on reliable LTH-AD were examined using structural equation models.
RESULTS: Reliability of the diagnosis of LTH-AD was moderate (κ = 0.54) and was predicted by the number of AD symptoms, treatment seeking, duration of most severe episode, and a great deal of time spent to obtain, use, or recover from alcohol use (DSM-IV AD criterion #5). Using an index of caseness, heritability of LTH-AD increased as a function of diagnostic confidence. Accounting for errors of measurement in a multivariate twin model, the heritability of LTH-AD increased from 55 to 71%.
CONCLUSIONS: Reliably diagnosed LTH-AD can be predicted by characteristics relevant to the disorder. LTH-AD appears to be a moderately reliable disorder of high heritability.

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Grants

  1. R37 AA011408-11/NIAAA NIH HHS
  2. R37 AA011408-14/NIAAA NIH HHS
  3. R37 AA011408-13/NIAAA NIH HHS
  4. AA-R37-011408/NIAAA NIH HHS
  5. R37 AA011408/NIAAA NIH HHS
  6. AA-P20-017828/NIAAA NIH HHS
  7. R37 AA011408-12/NIAAA NIH HHS
  8. R37 AA011408-10A1/NIAAA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Alcoholism
Databases, Factual
Diseases in Twins
Educational Status
Humans
Interview, Psychological
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Genetic
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
Reproducibility of Results
Risk Factors
Time Factors
Young Adult

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0LTH-ADheritabilityreliableDSM-IVmeasurementenvironmentaldiagnosisalcoholdependencemoderatelyerrorestimatereliabilitysampleidentifycharacteristicsfunctiondiagnosticconfidenceinfluencespredictedADuseincreaseddisorderBACKGROUND:assessmentDiagnosticStatisticalManualMentalDisordersFourthEditionlife-timehistoryfoundsubstantiallyheritableHoweverstudiesdiscriminatedtrueuniqueeffectsaimsstudyto:populationbasediipredictingiiiinvestigateivgeneticcorrectingMETHODS:unselected4203maletwinsinterviewedtwiceapproximately1-yearapartassessingperiodlifeLogisticregressionusedclinicalfeaturespredictGeneticexaminedusingstructuralequationmodelsRESULTS:Reliabilitymoderateκ=054numbersymptomstreatmentseekingdurationsevereepisodegreatdealtimespentobtainrecovercriterion#5UsingindexcasenessAccountingerrorsmultivariatetwinmodel5571%CONCLUSIONS:ReliablydiagnosedcanrelevantappearshighAlcoholmen:

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