Nurnberger John I, Wiegand Ryan, Bucholz Kathleen, O'Connor Sean, Meyer Eric T, Reich Theodore, Rice John, Schuckit Marc, King Lucy, Petti Theodore, Bierut Laura, Hinrichs Anthony L, Kuperman Samuel, Hesselbrock Victor, Porjesz Bernice
Institute of Psychiatric Research, Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis 46202-4887, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2004 Dec;61(12):1246-56. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.61.12.1246.
Alcohol dependence tends to aggregate within families. We analyzed data from the family collection of the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism to quantify familial aggregation using several different criterion sets. We also assessed the aggregation of other psychiatric disorders in the same sample to identify areas of possible shared genetic vulnerability.
Age-corrected lifetime morbid risk was estimated in adult first-degree relatives of affected probands and control subjects for selected disorders. Diagnostic data were gathered by semistructured interview (the Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism), family history, and medical records. Rates of illness were corrected by validating interview and family history reports against senior clinicians' all sources best estimate diagnoses. Sex, ethnicity, comorbidity, cohort effects, and site of ascertainment were also taken into account.
Including data from 8296 relatives of alcoholic probands and 1654 controls, we report lifetime risk rates of 28.8% and 14.4% for DSM-IV alcohol dependence in relatives of probands and controls, respectively; respective rates were 37.0% and 20.5% for the less stringent DSM-III-R alcohol dependence, 20.9% and 9.7% for any DSM-III-R diagnosis of nonalcohol nonnicotine substance dependence, and 8.1% and 5.2% for antisocial personality disorder. Rates of specific substance dependence were markedly increased in relatives of alcohol-dependent probands for cocaine, marijuana, opiates, sedatives, stimulants, and tobacco. Aggregation was also seen for panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and major depression.
The risk of alcohol dependence in relatives of probands compared with controls is increased about 2-fold. The aggregation of antisocial personality disorder, drug dependence, anxiety disorders, and mood disorders suggests common mechanisms for these disorders and alcohol dependence within some families. These data suggest new phenotypes for molecular genetic studies and alternative strategies for studying the heterogeneity of alcohol dependence.
酒精依赖往往在家庭中聚集。我们分析了酒精中毒遗传学合作研究的家庭数据集,使用几种不同的标准集来量化家族聚集性。我们还评估了同一样本中其他精神障碍的聚集性,以确定可能存在共同遗传易感性的领域。
对受影响先证者和对照受试者的成年一级亲属中选定疾病的年龄校正终生发病风险进行了估计。诊断数据通过半结构化访谈(酒精中毒遗传学半结构化评估)、家族史和病历收集。通过将访谈和家族史报告与资深临床医生的所有来源最佳估计诊断进行验证,校正疾病发生率。还考虑了性别、种族、共病、队列效应和确定地点。
纳入来自酒精性先证者的8296名亲属和1654名对照的数据,我们报告先证者亲属和对照中DSM-IV酒精依赖的终生风险率分别为28.8%和14.4%;对于不太严格的DSM-III-R酒精依赖,相应的比率分别为37.0%和20.5%,对于任何DSM-III-R诊断的非酒精非尼古丁物质依赖,比率分别为20.9%和9.7%,对于反社会人格障碍,比率分别为8.1%和5.2%。酒精依赖先证者的亲属中,可卡因、大麻、阿片类药物、镇静剂、兴奋剂和烟草的特定物质依赖率显著增加。惊恐障碍、强迫症、创伤后应激障碍和重度抑郁症也存在聚集性。
与对照相比,先证者亲属中酒精依赖的风险增加了约2倍。反社会人格障碍、药物依赖、焦虑障碍和情绪障碍的聚集表明,在一些家庭中,这些障碍与酒精依赖存在共同机制。这些数据为分子遗传学研究提出了新的表型,以及研究酒精依赖异质性的替代策略。