Colvert Emma, Tick Beata, McEwen Fiona, Stewart Catherine, Curran Sarah R, Woodhouse Emma, Gillan Nicola, Hallett Victoria, Lietz Stephanie, Garnett Tracy, Ronald Angelica, Plomin Robert, Rijsdijk Frühling, Happé Francesca, Bolton Patrick
MRC Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, England.
MRC Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, England2Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, K.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2015 May;72(5):415-23. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.3028.
Most evidence to date highlights the importance of genetic influences on the liability to autism and related traits. However, most of these findings are derived from clinically ascertained samples, possibly missing individuals with subtler manifestations, and obtained estimates may not be representative of the population.
To establish the relative contributions of genetic and environmental factors in liability to autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and a broader autism phenotype in a large population-based twin sample and to ascertain the genetic/environmental relationship between dimensional trait measures and categorical diagnostic constructs of ASD.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We used data from the population-based cohort Twins Early Development Study, which included all twin pairs born in England and Wales from January 1, 1994, through December 31, 1996. We performed joint continuous-ordinal liability threshold model fitting using the full information maximum likelihood method to estimate genetic and environmental parameters of covariance. Twin pairs underwent the following assessments: the Childhood Autism Spectrum Test (CAST) (6423 pairs; mean age, 7.9 years), the Development and Well-being Assessment (DAWBA) (359 pairs; mean age, 10.3 years), the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) (203 pairs; mean age, 13.2 years), the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) (205 pairs; mean age, 13.2 years), and a best-estimate diagnosis (207 pairs).
Participants underwent screening using a population-based measure of autistic traits (CAST assessment), structured diagnostic assessments (DAWBA, ADI-R, and ADOS), and a best-estimate diagnosis.
On all ASD measures, correlations among monozygotic twins (range, 0.77-0.99) were significantly higher than those for dizygotic twins (range, 0.22-0.65), giving heritability estimates of 56% to 95%. The covariance of CAST and ASD diagnostic status (DAWBA, ADOS and best-estimate diagnosis) was largely explained by additive genetic factors (76%-95%). For the ADI-R only, shared environmental influences were significant (30% [95% CI, 8%-47%]) but smaller than genetic influences (56% [95% CI, 37%-82%]).
The liability to ASD and a more broadly defined high-level autism trait phenotype in this large population-based twin sample derives primarily from additive genetic and, to a lesser extent, nonshared environmental effects. The largely consistent results across different diagnostic tools suggest that the results are generalizable across multiple measures and assessment methods. Genetic factors underpinning individual differences in autismlike traits show considerable overlap with genetic influences on diagnosed ASD.
迄今为止,大多数证据都突出了基因影响对自闭症及相关特质易感性的重要性。然而,这些发现大多来自临床确诊样本,可能遗漏了表现较轻微的个体,所获得的估计值可能无法代表总体人群。
在一个基于人群的大型双胞胎样本中,确定基因和环境因素对自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)易感性及更广泛自闭症表型的相对贡献,并确定维度特质测量与ASD分类诊断结构之间的基因/环境关系。
设计、地点和参与者:我们使用了基于人群的队列研究“双胞胎早期发展研究”的数据,该研究包括1994年1月1日至1996年12月31日在英格兰和威尔士出生的所有双胞胎对。我们使用全信息最大似然法进行联合连续-有序易感性阈值模型拟合,以估计协方差的基因和环境参数。双胞胎对接受了以下评估:儿童自闭症谱系测试(CAST)(6423对;平均年龄7.9岁)、发育与幸福评估(DAWBA)(359对;平均年龄10.3岁)、自闭症诊断观察量表(ADOS)(203对;平均年龄13.2岁)、自闭症诊断访谈修订版(ADI-R)(205对;平均年龄13.2岁)以及最佳估计诊断(207对)。
参与者使用基于人群的自闭症特质测量方法(CAST评估)、结构化诊断评估(DAWBA、ADI-R和ADOS)以及最佳估计诊断进行筛查。
在所有ASD测量指标上,同卵双胞胎之间的相关性(范围为0.77 - 0.99)显著高于异卵双胞胎(范围为0.22 - 0.65),遗传度估计值为56%至95%。CAST与ASD诊断状态(DAWBA、ADOS和最佳估计诊断)之间的协方差在很大程度上由加性基因因素解释(76% - 95%)。仅对于ADI-R,共享环境影响显著(30%[95%CI,8% - 47%]),但小于基因影响(56%[95%CI,37% - 82%])。
在这个基于人群的大型双胞胎样本中,ASD及更广泛定义的高水平自闭症特质表型的易感性主要源于加性基因,在较小程度上源于非共享环境效应。不同诊断工具得出的结果基本一致,表明这些结果可推广到多种测量方法和评估方式。导致自闭症样特质个体差异的基因因素与对已确诊ASD的基因影响有相当大的重叠。