Oquendo Maria A, Ellis Steven P, Chesin Megan S, Birmaher Boris, Zelazny Jamie, Tin Adrienne, Melhem Nadine, Burke Ainsley K, Kolko David, Greenhill Laurence, Stanley Barbara, Brodsky Beth S, Mann J John, Brent David A
Division of Molecular Imaging and Neuropathology, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY.
Bipolar Disord. 2013 Nov;15(7):764-73. doi: 10.1111/bdi.12107. Epub 2013 Aug 5.
Offspring of depressed parents are at increased risk for psychiatric disorders. Although bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) are both found in the same families, it is not clear whether transmission to offspring of BD or MDD tends to occur from parents with the same mood disorder subtype. Our primary hypothesis was that the offspring of parents with BD would be at increased risk for BD and other comorbid disorders common to BD, such as anxiety and substance use, relative to the offspring of parents with MDD. The offspring of parents with BD versus those with MDD were also hypothesized to be at greater risk for externalizing disorders (i.e., conduct disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, or antisocial personality disorder).
Parents (n = 320) with mood disorders and their offspring (n = 679) were studied. Adult offspring were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders to establish the presence of psychopathology. Offspring aged 10-18 years were assessed using the School Aged Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia, Present and Lifetime version, and parents of children under the age of ten completed the Child Behavioral Checklist. Data were examined using Cox proportional hazard regression.
There was no difference in hazard of mood disorders in the offspring of parents with BD as compared to the offspring of parents with MDD. However, a number of other parent and offspring characteristics increased the risk of mood, anxiety, externalizing, and substance use disorders in the offspring, including self-reported childhood abuse in the parent or offspring, offspring impulsive aggression, and the age at onset of parental mood disorder.
Mood disorders are highly familial, a finding that appears independent of whether the parent's condition is unipolar or bipolar, suggesting considerable overlap in the heritability of MDD and BD. Although parental characteristics had a limited influence on the risk of offspring psychopathology, reported childhood adversity, be it in the parent or child, is a harbinger of negative outcomes. These risk factors extend previous findings, and are consistent with diathesis-stress conceptualizations.
父母患有抑郁症的后代患精神疾病的风险增加。虽然双相情感障碍(BD)和重度抑郁症(MDD)在同一家族中均有发现,但尚不清楚BD或MDD向后代的传递是否倾向于来自患有相同心境障碍亚型的父母。我们的主要假设是,与患有MDD的父母的后代相比,患有BD的父母的后代患BD及其他BD常见共病(如焦虑症和物质使用障碍)的风险会增加。还假设患有BD的父母的后代比患有MDD的父母的后代出现外化性障碍(即品行障碍、注意力缺陷多动障碍或反社会人格障碍)的风险更大。
对患有心境障碍的父母(n = 320)及其后代(n = 679)进行了研究。对成年后代进行《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版轴I障碍的结构化临床访谈,以确定是否存在精神病理学症状。对10至18岁的后代使用《学龄情感障碍和精神分裂症量表》(目前和终生版)进行评估,10岁以下儿童的父母完成《儿童行为清单》。使用Cox比例风险回归分析数据。
与患有MDD的父母的后代相比,患有BD的父母的后代患心境障碍的风险没有差异。然而,一些其他的父母和后代特征增加了后代患心境、焦虑、外化性和物质使用障碍的风险,包括父母或后代自我报告的童年期受虐经历、后代冲动攻击行为以及父母心境障碍的发病年龄。
心境障碍具有高度家族聚集性,这一发现似乎与父母的病情是单相还是双相无关,表明MDD和BD在遗传度上有相当大的重叠。虽然父母特征对后代精神病理学风险的影响有限,但报告的童年期逆境,无论是在父母还是孩子身上,都是负面结果的先兆。这些风险因素扩展了先前的研究结果,并且与素质-应激概念相符。