Sosnowski David W, Rabinowitz Jill A, Feder Kenneth A, Strickland Justin C, Hancock Dana B, Uhl George R, Ialongo Nicholas S, Maher Brion S
Department of Mental Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2025 Jul;86(4):530-541. doi: 10.15288/jsad.23-00397.
Despite adverse health consequences associated with early substance use initiation, less is known about the influence of genetic risk on initiation and environmental characteristics that may moderate these associations, particularly among African Americans. We examined whether genetic risk for alcohol use disorder, cannabis use disorder, and nicotine dependence is associated with age at initiation of these substances and whether community disadvantage and parental monitoring moderate these associations in a sample of African American youth.
Participants ( = 1,017; 56% female) were initially recruited for an elementary school-based universal prevention intervention trial. At about age 20, participants reported on their age at initiation of alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis use and provided a saliva or blood sample. At about age 12, caregiver reports on parental monitoring were obtained, along with census-tract data to measure community disadvantage. Hypotheses were tested using Cox Proportional Hazard Models.
Higher alcohol use disorder polygenic risk scores (PRSs) were associated with later alcohol initiation (hazard ratio = 0.78, 95% CI [0.65, 0.94]). Cannabis use disorder and nicotine dependence PRSs were not associated with initiation of these substances. We observed an interaction between the cannabis use disorder PRS and parental monitoring; among individuals with high cannabis use disorder PRS, high monitoring was associated with earlier cannabis initiation, whereas among individuals with low PRS, low monitoring was associated with earlier initiation.
Findings largely indicate that PRSs for substance use disorders are not associated with age at initiation among African American youth. Parental monitoring may influence the association between cannabis use disorder PRS and age at cannabis initiation, but replication of our findings is warranted.
尽管早期开始使用毒品会对健康产生不良影响,但关于遗传风险对开始使用毒品的影响以及可能调节这些关联的环境特征,我们所知甚少,尤其是在非裔美国人中。我们研究了酒精使用障碍、大麻使用障碍和尼古丁依赖的遗传风险是否与开始使用这些物质的年龄相关,以及社区劣势和父母监督是否会调节非裔美国青年样本中的这些关联。
参与者(n = 1017;56%为女性)最初是为一项基于小学的普遍预防干预试验招募的。在大约20岁时,参与者报告了他们开始使用酒精、烟草和大麻的年龄,并提供了唾液或血液样本。在大约12岁时,获取了照顾者关于父母监督的报告,以及用于衡量社区劣势的人口普查区数据。使用Cox比例风险模型检验假设。
较高的酒精使用障碍多基因风险评分(PRSs)与较晚开始饮酒相关(风险比 = 0.78,95%置信区间[0.65, 0.94])。大麻使用障碍和尼古丁依赖的PRSs与开始使用这些物质无关。我们观察到大麻使用障碍PRS与父母监督之间存在相互作用;在大麻使用障碍PRS高的个体中,高监督与较早开始使用大麻相关,而在PRS低的个体中,低监督与较早开始使用大麻相关。
研究结果在很大程度上表明,物质使用障碍的PRSs与非裔美国青年开始使用毒品的年龄无关。父母监督可能会影响大麻使用障碍PRS与开始使用大麻年龄之间的关联,但我们的研究结果需要重复验证。