Am J Psychiatry. 2014 Feb;171(2):209-17. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.12101300.
Using Swedish nationwide registry data, the authors investigated genetic and environmental risk factors in the etiology of drug abuse by twin sibling modeling. The authors followed up with epidemiological analyses to identify shared environmental influences on drug abuse.
Drug abuse was defined using public medical, legal, or pharmacy records. Twin and sibling pairs were obtained from the national twin and genealogical registers. Information about sibling pair residence within the same household, small residential area, or municipality was obtained from Statistics Sweden. The authors predicted concordance for drug abuse by years of co-residence until the older sibling turned 21 and risk for future drug abuse in adolescents living with parental figures as a function of family-level socioeconomic status and neighborhood social deprivation.
The best twin sibling fit model predicted substantial heritability for drug abuse in males (55%) and females (73%), with environmental factors shared by siblings operating only in males and accounting for 23% of the variance in liability. For each year of living in the same household, the probability of sibling concordance for drug abuse increased 2%-5%. When not residing in the same household, concordance was predicted from residence in the same small residential area or municipality. Risk for drug abuse was predicted both by family socioeconomic status and neighborhood social deprivation. Controlling for family socioeconomic status, each year of living in a high social deprivation neighborhood increased the risk for drug abuse by 2%.
Using objective registry data, the authors found that drug abuse is highly heritable. A substantial proportion of the shared environmental effect on drug abuse comes from community-wide rather than household-level influences. Genetic effects demonstrated in twin studies have led to molecular analyses to elucidate biological pathways. In a parallel manner, environmental effects can be followed up by epidemiological studies to clarify social mechanisms.
利用瑞典全国登记数据,通过双胞胎同胞模型研究药物滥用的遗传和环境风险因素。作者通过流行病学分析来确定药物滥用的共同环境影响。
药物滥用的定义是基于公共医疗、法律或药房记录。双胞胎和兄弟姐妹对是从全国双胞胎和系谱登记处获得的。关于兄弟姐妹在同一家庭、小居住区域或市居住的信息是从瑞典统计局获得的。作者预测了药物滥用的一致性,即共同居住的年限,直到年龄较大的兄弟姐妹年满 21 岁,以及生活在父母家庭中的青少年未来药物滥用的风险,作为家庭层面社会经济地位和邻里社会剥夺的函数。
最佳的双胞胎同胞拟合模型预测男性(55%)和女性(73%)药物滥用具有大量的遗传性,而兄弟姐妹之间共享的环境因素仅在男性中起作用,占易感性变异的 23%。每同居一年,兄弟姐妹药物滥用的一致性概率增加 2%-5%。当不住在同一家庭时,一致性可以通过居住在同一小居住区域或市来预测。药物滥用的风险既受家庭社会经济地位的影响,也受邻里社会剥夺的影响。控制家庭社会经济地位后,居住在高社会剥夺社区的每增加一年,药物滥用的风险就增加 2%。
使用客观的登记数据,作者发现药物滥用具有高度遗传性。药物滥用的共同环境影响的很大一部分来自于社区而不是家庭层面的影响。双胞胎研究中的遗传效应导致了分子分析,以阐明生物学途径。以类似的方式,可以通过流行病学研究来跟进环境效应,以阐明社会机制。