Pergadia Michele L, Heath Andrew C, Martin Nicholas G, Madden Pamela A F
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Psychol Med. 2006 Jul;36(7):963-72. doi: 10.1017/S0033291706007495.
We examined whether there are genetic influences on nicotine withdrawal, and whether there are genetic factors specific to nicotine withdrawal, after controlling for factors responsible for risk of progression beyond experimentation with cigarettes and for quantity smoked (average number of cigarettes per day at peak lifetime use).
Epidemiologic and genetic analyses were conducted using telephone diagnostic interview data from young adult Australian twins reporting any cigarette use (3026 women, 2553 men; mean age 30 years).
Genetic analysis of the eight symptoms of DSM-IV nicotine withdrawal suggests heritability is intermediate for most symptoms (26-43%), and similar in men and women. The exceptions were depressed mood upon withdrawal, which had stronger additive genetic influences in men (53%) compared to women (29%), and decreased heart rate, which had low heritability (9%). Although prevalence rates were substantially lower for DSM-IV nicotine withdrawal syndrome (15.9%), which requires impairment, than for the DSM-IV nicotine dependence withdrawal criterion (43.6%), heritability was similar for both measures: as high as 47%. Genetic modeling of smoking more than 1 or 2 cigarettes lifetime ('progression'), quantity smoked and nicotine withdrawal found significant genetic overlap across all three components of nicotine use/dependence (genetic correlations = 0.53-0.76). Controlling for factors associated with risk of cigarette smoking beyond experimentation and quantity smoked, evidence for genetic influences specific to nicotine withdrawal (up to 23% of total variance) remained.
Our results suggest that at least some individuals become 'hooked' or progress in the smoking habit, in part, because of a vulnerability to nicotine withdrawal.
在控制了导致吸烟行为超出尝试阶段的风险因素以及吸烟量(终生吸烟高峰期每日平均吸烟支数)之后,我们研究了吸烟成瘾是否受遗传影响,以及是否存在特定于吸烟成瘾的遗传因素。
利用澳大利亚年轻成年双胞胎报告的任何吸烟情况的电话诊断访谈数据进行了流行病学和遗传学分析(3026名女性,2553名男性;平均年龄30岁)。
对《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)中吸烟成瘾的八项症状进行遗传学分析表明,大多数症状的遗传度处于中等水平(26%-43%),且男女相似。例外情况是,戒烟时情绪低落,男性的加性遗传影响(53%)比女性(29%)更强;心率下降,遗传度较低(9%)。尽管DSM-IV中需要有功能损害的吸烟成瘾综合征患病率(15.9%)远低于DSM-IV中吸烟依赖戒断标准的患病率(43.6%),但两种测量方法的遗传度相似:高达47%。对终生吸烟超过1支或2支(“进展”)、吸烟量和吸烟成瘾进行的遗传模型分析发现,吸烟使用/依赖的所有三个组成部分之间存在显著的遗传重叠(遗传相关性=0.53-0.76)。在控制了与吸烟风险超过尝试阶段和吸烟量相关的因素后,仍有证据表明存在特定于吸烟成瘾的遗传影响(高达总方差的23%)。
我们的研究结果表明,至少部分个体养成吸烟习惯或在吸烟习惯上有所进展,部分原因是对吸烟成瘾的易感性。