Thomas Sarah A, Weeks Justin W, Dougherty Lea R, Lipton Melanie F, Daruwala Samantha E, Kline Kathryn, De Los Reyes Andres
Comprehensive Assessment and Intervention Program, Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Biology/Psychology Building, Room 3123H, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Department of Psychology, Ohio University, Athens, OH, USA.
J Psychopathol Behav Assess. 2015 Dec 1;37(4):597-610. doi: 10.1007/s10862-015-9488-8. Epub 2015 May 19.
Social anxiety often develops in adolescence, and precedes the onset of depression and substance use disorders. The link between social anxiety and use of behaviors to minimize distress in social situations (i.e., ) is strong and for some patients, this link poses difficulty for engaging in, and benefiting from, exposure-based treatment. Yet, little is known about whether individual differences may moderate links between social anxiety and safety behaviors, namely variations in genetic alleles germane to anxiety. We examined the relation between adolescent social anxiety and expressions of safety behaviors, and whether allelic variation for anxiety moderates this relation. Adolescents (=75; ages 14-17) were recruited from two larger studies investigating measurement of family relationships or adolescent social anxiety. Adolescents completed self-report measures about social anxiety symptoms and use of safety behaviors. They also provided saliva samples to assess allelic variations for anxiety from two genetic polymorphisms (BDNF rs6265; TAQ1A rs1800497). Controlling for adolescent age and gender, we observed a significant interaction between social anxiety symptoms and allelic variation (=0.37, =2.41, =.02). Specifically, adolescents carrying allelic variations for anxiety evidenced a statistically significant and relatively strong positive relation between social anxiety symptoms and safety behaviors (=0.73), whereas adolescents not carrying allelic variation evidenced a statistically non-significant and relatively weak relation (=0.22). These findings have important implications for treating adolescent social anxiety, in that we identified an individual difference variable that can be used to identify people who evidence a particularly strong link between use of safety behaviors and expressing social anxiety.
社交焦虑通常在青春期出现,并先于抑郁和物质使用障碍的发作。社交焦虑与在社交情境中使用行为来最小化痛苦(即 )之间的联系很强,对于一些患者来说,这种联系给基于暴露的治疗的参与和受益带来了困难。然而,关于个体差异是否可能调节社交焦虑与安全行为之间的联系,即与焦虑相关的基因等位基因的变异,我们知之甚少。我们研究了青少年社交焦虑与安全行为表达之间的关系,以及焦虑的等位基因变异是否调节这种关系。青少年(=75;年龄14 - 17岁)从两项关于家庭关系测量或青少年社交焦虑的较大规模研究中招募。青少年完成了关于社交焦虑症状和安全行为使用的自我报告测量。他们还提供了唾液样本,以评估来自两种基因多态性(BDNF rs6265;TAQ1A rs1800497)的焦虑等位基因变异。在控制青少年年龄和性别后,我们观察到社交焦虑症状与等位基因变异之间存在显著交互作用(=0.37,=2.41,=.02)。具体而言,携带焦虑等位基因变异的青少年在社交焦虑症状与安全行为之间表现出统计学上显著且相对较强的正相关(=0.73),而未携带等位基因变异的青少年则表现出统计学上不显著且相对较弱的关系(=0.22)。这些发现对治疗青少年社交焦虑具有重要意义,因为我们确定了一个个体差异变量,可用于识别那些在安全行为使用与社交焦虑表达之间存在特别强联系的人。