Sartor Carolyn E, Agrawal Arpana, Lynskey Michael T, Bucholz Kathleen K, Heath Andrew C
Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2008 Apr;32(4):632-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2008.00621.x. Epub 2008 Mar 4.
The development of alcohol dependence (AD) involves transitions through multiple stages of drinking behaviors and is shaped by both heritable and environmental influences. We attempted to capture this dynamic process by characterizing genetic and environmental contributions to the rate at which women progressed through 3 significant transitions along the pathway to AD: nonuse to initiation, initiation to onset of first alcohol-related problem, and first problem to onset of AD.
The sample consisted of 3,546 female twins from the Missouri Adolescent Female Twin Study. Participants ranged in age from 18 to 29 years. Retrospective reports of alcohol use histories were collected by telephone diagnostic interview and transition times between drinking milestones were coded ordinally. Standard genetic analyses were conducted in Mx to derive a trivariate model that provided estimates of genetic and environmental influences that were common as well as specific to the 3 transition times.
Heritable influences were found for rate of progression across all 3 transitions, accounting for 30 to 47% of the variance in transition times. Shared environmental contributions were evident only in rate of progression from nonuse to initiation (i.e., age at first drink). Heritable contributions to the rate of movement through successive drinking milestones were attributable to a common factor, whereas environmental influences were transition-specific.
The current study is unique in its use of a genetically informative design to document the rate of movement between drinking milestones in a female sample and to examine genetic contributions to multiple transition times over the course of AD development. Results indicate that an earlier report of heritability for males in rate of progression from regular drinking to AD generalizes to women and to other alcohol stage transitions. Findings also suggest the need to consider stage-specific environmental contributions to alcohol outcomes in developing interventions.
酒精依赖(AD)的发展涉及饮酒行为多个阶段的转变,并且受到遗传和环境因素的共同影响。我们试图通过描述遗传和环境因素对女性在通往AD的过程中经历的三个重要转变的进展速度的影响,来捕捉这一动态过程:从不饮酒到开始饮酒、从开始饮酒到首次出现与酒精相关问题、从首次出现问题到发展为AD。
样本包括来自密苏里青少年女性双胞胎研究的3546名女性双胞胎。参与者年龄在18至29岁之间。通过电话诊断访谈收集饮酒历史的回顾性报告,并对饮酒里程碑之间的转变时间进行顺序编码。在Mx中进行标准遗传分析,以得出一个三变量模型,该模型提供了对遗传和环境影响的估计,这些影响在这三个转变时间中既有共同的,也有特定的。
在所有三个转变过程的进展速度中都发现了遗传影响,占转变时间方差的30%至47%。共同环境影响仅在从不饮酒到开始饮酒的进展速度中明显(即首次饮酒的年龄)。通过连续饮酒里程碑的进展速度的遗传贡献归因于一个共同因素,而环境影响是特定于转变阶段的。
本研究的独特之处在于使用了具有遗传信息的设计,以记录女性样本中饮酒里程碑之间的转变速度,并检查AD发展过程中多个转变时间的遗传贡献。结果表明,先前关于男性从规律饮酒到AD进展速度的遗传性报告也适用于女性以及其他酒精阶段的转变。研究结果还表明,在制定干预措施时需要考虑特定阶段的环境对酒精相关结果的影响。