Genetic and environmental risk factors for illicit substance use and use disorders: Joint analysis of self and co-twin ratings.

Eivind Ystrom, Ted Reichborn-Kjennerud, Michael C Neale, Kenneth S Kendler
Author Information
  1. Eivind Ystrom: Department of Genetics, Environment and Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Nydalen, P.O. Box 4404, 0403, Oslo, Norway, eivind.ystrom@fhi.no.

Abstract

The specificity of genetic and environmental risk factors for illicit substance use and substance use disorders (SUD) was investigated by utilizing self and co-twin reports in 1,791 male twins. There was a high rate of comorbidity between both use of, and SUD from, different classes of illicit substances. For substance use, the model that included one common genetic, one shared environmental, and one individual-specific (i.e., unique) environmental factor, along with substance-specific effects that were attributed entirely to genetic factors fit the data best. For illicit SUD, one common genetic and one common unique environmental risk factor, and substance specific shared environmental and unique environmental risk factors were identified. Risk factors for illicit substance use and SUD are mainly non-specific to substance class. Co-twin rating of illicit substance use and SUD was a reliable source of information, and by taking account of random and systematic measurement error, environmental exposures unique to the individual were of lesser importance than found in earlier studies.

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Grants

  1. P20 AA017828/NIAAA NIH HHS
  2. R37 AA011408/NIAAA NIH HHS
  3. AA-P20-017828/NIAAA NIH HHS
  4. AA-R37-011408/NIAAA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Diseases in Twins
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Humans
Male
Prevalence
Risk Factors
Social Environment
Substance-Related Disorders
Twins

Word Cloud

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