Bolhuis K, McAdams T A, Monzani B, Gregory A M, Mataix-Cols D, Stringaris A, Eley T C
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.
Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.
Psychol Med. 2014 May;44(7):1439-49. doi: 10.1017/S0033291713001591. Epub 2013 Aug 7.
Depression is commonly co-morbid with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, it is unknown whether depression is a functional consequence of OCD or whether these disorders share a common genetic aetiology. This longitudinal twin study compared these two hypotheses.
Data were drawn from a longitudinal sample of adolescent twins and siblings (n = 2651; Genesis 12-19 study) and from a cross-sectional sample of adult twins (n = 4920). The longitudinal phenotypic associations between OCD symptoms (OCS) and depressive symptoms were examined using a cross-lag model. Multivariate twin analyses were performed to explore the genetic and environmental contributions to the cross-sectional and longitudinal relationship between OCS and depressive symptoms.
In the longitudinal phenotypic analyses, OCS at time 1 (wave 2 of the Genesis 12-19 study) predicted depressive symptoms at time 2 (wave 3 of the Genesis 12-19 study) to a similar extent to which depressive symptoms at time 1 predicted OCS at time 2. Cross-sectional twin analyses in both samples indicated that common genetic factors explained 52-65% of the phenotypic correlation between OCS and depressive symptoms. The proportion of the phenotypic correlation due to common non-shared environmental factors was considerably smaller (35%). In the adolescent sample, the longitudinal association between OCS at time 1 and subsequent depressive symptoms was accounted for by the genetic association between OCS and depressive symptoms at time 1. There was no significant environmental association between OCS and later depressive symptoms.
The present findings show that OCS and depressive symptoms co-occur primarily due to shared genetic factors and suggest that genetic, rather than environmental, effects account for the longitudinal relationship between OCS and depressive symptoms.
抑郁症常与强迫症(OCD)共病。然而,尚不清楚抑郁症是强迫症的功能性后果,还是这些疾病具有共同的遗传病因。这项纵向双生子研究对这两种假设进行了比较。
数据来自青少年双胞胎和兄弟姐妹的纵向样本(n = 2651;创世纪12 - 19研究)以及成年双胞胎的横断面样本(n = 4920)。使用交叉滞后模型检查强迫症症状(OCS)与抑郁症状之间的纵向表型关联。进行多变量双生子分析,以探讨遗传和环境因素对OCS与抑郁症状之间横断面和纵向关系的影响。
在纵向表型分析中,时间1(创世纪12 - 19研究的第2波)的OCS对时间2(创世纪12 - 19研究的第3波)的抑郁症状的预测程度,与时间1的抑郁症状对时间2的OCS的预测程度相似。两个样本的横断面双生子分析表明,共同的遗传因素解释了OCS与抑郁症状之间表型相关性的52 - 65%。由共同的非共享环境因素导致的表型相关性比例要小得多(35%)。在青少年样本中,时间1的OCS与随后抑郁症状之间的纵向关联是由时间1的OCS与抑郁症状之间的遗传关联所解释的。OCS与后期抑郁症状之间没有显著的环境关联。
目前的研究结果表明,OCS和抑郁症状同时出现主要是由于共享的遗传因素,并表明遗传而非环境因素解释了OCS与抑郁症状之间的纵向关系。