Gustavson Daniel E, Bell Tyler R, Buchholz Erik J, Zellers Stephanie, Luczak Susan E, Reynolds Chandra A, Finch Brian K, Nygaard Marianne, Catts Vibeke S, Christensen Kaare, Finkel Deborah, Kremen William S, Latvala Antti, Martin Nicholas G, McGue Matt, Mewton Louise, Mosing Miriam A, Panizzon Matthew S, Plassman Brenda L, Kaprio Jaakko, Gatz Margaret, Franz Carol E
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado Boulder.
Department of Psychiatry, Center for Behavior Genetics of Aging, University of California, San Diego.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2025 Jan 9. doi: 10.1037/adb0001052.
Alcohol use is common in older adults and linked to poor health and aging outcomes. Studies have demonstrated genetic and environmental contributions to the quantity of alcohol consumption in mid-to-late life, but less is known about whether these influences are moderated by sociodemographic factors such as age, sex, and educational attainment. This study sought to better understand sociodemographic trends in alcohol consumption across the second half of the life course and their underlying genetic and environmental influences.
Primary analyses were based on 64,140 middle-aged or older adult twins (40-102 years) from 14 studies in the Interplay of Genes and Environment Across Multiple Studies consortium. We harmonized a measure of weekly alcohol consumption (in grams of ethanol per week) across all studies.
Older age was associated with lower alcohol consumption, primarily for adults over age 75, for individuals with higher education, and for males. Trends were similar across birth cohorts and after excluding current abstainers. At mean age 56, alcohol use was moderately heritable in females (.34, 95% CI [.26, .41]) and more heritable in males (.42, 95% CI [.38, .45]). Heritability was lower in older aged adults and in females with higher education.
This study represents the largest twin study of alcohol consumption in middle-aged and older adults. Results highlight that genetic and environmental factors influence alcohol consumption differently across age, sex, and educational attainment and that intervention efforts may need to be tailored based on individuals' backgrounds. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
饮酒在老年人中很常见,且与健康状况不佳和衰老结果相关。研究已证明基因和环境因素对中老年时期的饮酒量有影响,但对于这些影响是否会受到年龄、性别和教育程度等社会人口学因素的调节,我们所知甚少。本研究旨在更好地了解整个生命历程后半段饮酒的社会人口学趋势及其潜在的基因和环境影响。
主要分析基于来自多研究基因与环境相互作用联盟中14项研究的64140名中年或老年双胞胎(40 - 102岁)。我们对所有研究中的每周饮酒量(以每周乙醇克数为单位)进行了统一测量。
年龄较大与饮酒量较低相关,主要体现在75岁以上的成年人、受过高等教育的个体以及男性中。在不同出生队列以及排除当前戒酒者后,趋势相似。在平均年龄56岁时,女性的饮酒行为具有中度遗传性(.34,95%置信区间[.26,.41]),男性的遗传性更强(.42,95%置信区间[.38,.45])。老年人以及受过高等教育的女性中遗传性较低。
本研究是针对中年和老年人饮酒的最大规模双胞胎研究。结果表明,基因和环境因素对饮酒的影响在年龄、性别和教育程度方面存在差异,干预措施可能需要根据个体背景进行调整。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)