1. An Adolescent Substance Prevention Model Blocks the Effect of CHRNA5 Genotype on Smoking During High School.
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Vandenbergh, David J., Schlomer, Gabriel L., Cleveland, H. Harrington, Schink, Alisa E., Hair, Kerry L., Feinberg, Mark E., Neiderhiser, Jenae M., Greenberg, Mark T., Spoth, Richard L., and Redmond, Cleve
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention , *SMOKING , *HIGH schools , *SCHOOL children -- Abuse of , *NICOTINIC acetylcholine receptors , *GENETIC markers - Abstract
Introduction: Prevention intervention programs reduce substance use, including smoking, but not all individuals respond. We tested whether response to a substance use prevention/intervention program varies based upon a set of five markers (rs16969968, rs1948, rs578776, rs588765, and rs684513) within the cluster of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit genes (CHRNA5/A3/B4).Methods: Participants (N = 424) were randomly assigned to either control condition, or a family-based intervention in grade 6 and a school-based drug preventive intervention in grade 7. Smoking in the past month was assessed in grades 9-12 using a four-point scale (0 = never smoked, 1 = smoked but not in last month, 2 = one or a few times, 3 = about once a week or more).Results: There was a main effect of both the intervention (b = -0.24, P < .05) and genotype at rs16969968 (b = 0.14, P < .05) on high school smoking. Using dummy coding to allow for nonlinear effects, individuals with the A/A genotype smoked more often than those with G/G (b = 0.33, P < .05). A genotype × intervention effect was found with reduced smoking among those with A/A and G/A genotypes to levels similar to those with the G/G genotype (G/G vs. A/A: b = -0.67, P < .05; A/G vs. A/A: b = -0.61, P < .05; G/G vs. A/G ns). Results were nonsignificant for the other four markers.Conclusions: Preventive interventions can reduce the genetic risk for smoking from rs16969968. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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