Grant Julia D, Agrawal Arpana, Werner Kimberly B, McCutcheon Vivia V, Nelson Elliot C, Madden Pamela A F, Bucholz Kathleen K, Heath Andrew C, Sartor Carolyn E
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8134, Saint Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8134, Saint Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Oct 1;179:146-152. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.06.038. Epub 2017 Jul 29.
Childhood maltreatment is a known risk factor for cannabis initiation and problem use, but the extent to which this association is attributable to shared familial influences is unknown. We estimate the magnitude of associations between childhood maltreatment, timing of cannabis initiation, and cannabis-related problems, in European-American (EA) and African-American (AA) women, and parse the relative influence of additive genetic (A), shared environmental (C), and individual-specific environmental (E) factors on these constructs and their covariation.
Data were from diagnostic telephone interviews conducted with 3786 participants (14.6% AA) in a population-based study of female twins. Logistic regression analyses and twin modeling were used to test for associations, and estimate the relative contributions of genetic and environmental influences to childhood maltreatment and cannabis outcomes and their covariation.
Maltreatment was significantly associated with increased likelihood of cannabis initiation before age 15 among EAs (OR=6.33) and AAs (OR=3.93), but with increased likelihood of later initiation among EAs only (OR=1.68). Maltreatment was associated with cannabis problems among both groups (EA OR=2.32; AA OR=2.03). Among EA women, the covariation between maltreatment and cannabis outcomes was primarily attributable to familial environment (rC=0.67-0.70); among AAs, only individual-specific environment contributed (rE=0.37-0.40).
Childhood maltreatment is a major contributor to early initiation of cannabis as well as progression to cannabis problems in both AA and EA women. Distinctions by race/ethnicity are not in the relative contribution of genetic factors, but rather in the type of environmental influences that contribute to stages of cannabis involvement.
儿童期受虐是开始使用大麻及出现问题性使用的一个已知风险因素,但这种关联在多大程度上可归因于共同的家庭影响尚不清楚。我们估计了欧美裔(EA)和非裔美国(AA)女性中儿童期受虐、开始使用大麻的时间以及与大麻相关问题之间关联的强度,并剖析了加性遗传(A)、共同环境(C)和个体特异性环境(E)因素对这些构念及其协变的相对影响。
数据来自一项针对女性双胞胎的基于人群的研究中对3786名参与者(14.6%为非裔美国人)进行的诊断性电话访谈。采用逻辑回归分析和双胞胎建模来检验关联,并估计遗传和环境影响对儿童期受虐和大麻使用结果及其协变的相对贡献。
在欧美裔(优势比=6.33)和非裔美国人(优势比=3.93)中,受虐与15岁前开始使用大麻的可能性增加显著相关,但仅在欧美裔中与较晚开始使用大麻的可能性增加相关(优势比=1.68)。两组中受虐均与大麻相关问题有关(欧美裔优势比=2.32;非裔美国人优势比=2.03)。在欧美裔女性中,受虐与大麻使用结果之间的协变主要归因于家庭环境(rC=0.67 - 0.70);在非裔美国人中,仅个体特异性环境起作用(rE=0.37 - 0.40)。
儿童期受虐是导致非裔美国和欧美裔女性早期开始使用大麻以及发展为大麻相关问题的主要因素。种族/族裔差异不在于遗传因素的相对贡献,而在于促成大麻使用各阶段的环境影响类型。