Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics and Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond (Amstadter, Cusack, Kendler); Center for Primary Health Care Research, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden (Lönn, J. Sundquist, K. Sundquist); Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Department of Population Health Science and Policy, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York (J. Sundquist, K. Sundquist).
Am J Psychiatry. 2024 Aug 1;181(8):720-727. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.20230104. Epub 2024 Jun 4.
Twin studies have demonstrated that posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is moderately heritable, and the pattern of findings across studies suggests higher heritability in females compared with males. Formal testing of sex differences has yet to be done in twin studies of PTSD. The authors sought to estimate the genetic and environmental contributions to PTSD, and to formally test for sex differences, in the largest sample to date of both sexes, among twins and siblings.
Using the Swedish National Registries, the authors performed structural equation modeling to decompose genetic and environmental variance for PTSD and to formally test for quantitative and qualitative sex differences in twins (16,242 pairs) and in full siblings within 2 years of age of each other (376,093 pairs), using diagnostic codes from medical registries.
The best-fit model suggested that additive genetic and unique environmental effects contributed to PTSD. Evidence for a quantitative sex effect was found, such that heritability was significantly greater in females (35.4%) than males (28.6%). Evidence of a qualitative sex effect was found, such that the genetic correlation was high but less than complete (r=0.81, 95% CI=0.73-0.89). No evidence of shared environment or special twin environment was found.
This is the first demonstration of quantitative and qualitative sex effects for PTSD. The results suggest that unique environmental effects, but not the shared environment, contributed to PTSD and that genetic influences for the disorder are stronger in females compared with males. Although the heritability is highly correlated, it is not at unity between the sexes.
双胞胎研究表明,创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)具有中等程度的遗传性,而且各研究的结果模式表明,女性的遗传性高于男性。在 PTSD 的双胞胎研究中,尚未对性别差异进行正式测试。作者试图在迄今为止最大的男女双胞胎和兄弟姐妹样本中,估计 PTSD 的遗传和环境贡献,并正式测试性别差异。
作者利用瑞典国家登记处,使用结构方程模型对 PTSD 的遗传和环境方差进行分解,并使用医疗登记处的诊断代码,在 2 年内年龄相近的双胞胎(16242 对)和全同胞(376093 对)中,正式测试数量和质量性别差异。
最佳拟合模型表明,累加遗传和独特环境效应有助于 PTSD。发现了定量性别效应的证据,表明女性(35.4%)的遗传性明显高于男性(28.6%)。发现了定性性别效应的证据,表明遗传相关性很高,但不完全(r=0.81,95%置信区间=0.73-0.89)。未发现共享环境或特殊双胞胎环境的证据。
这是 PTSD 定量和定性性别效应的首次证明。结果表明,独特的环境效应,但不是共享环境,有助于 PTSD,而且与男性相比,女性的遗传影响更强。尽管遗传力高度相关,但在性别之间并不完全一致。