1. Familial risk for depression and anxiety: What can we learn from siblings?
- Author
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van Sprang, Eleonore Dorothée and van Sprang, Eleonore Dorothée
- Abstract
Background Family history of affective disorders has long been recognized as one of the strongest risk factors for the onset and maintenance of the disorders. Familial risk for affective disorders represents an integration of an underlying genetic vulnerability and the familial clustering of unfavorable family circumstances in (early) life. In order to alleviate some of the burden that affective disorders are causing, it is necessary to better understand how the disorders and their associated features operate within families to increase psychopathology. This thesis extensively examined familial risk for affective disorders, with a broad focus on the role of genetic, clinical, and psychosocial vulnerability, and poor immunometabolic health. Methods Data came from the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA), an ongoing longitudinal cohort study (2004-present) on the long-term course and consequences of affective disorders. The baseline sample consisted of 2,981 participants (18-65 years), including 2,319 persons with a lifetime affective disorder and 652 healthy controls. Participants were assessed in face-to-face interviews at baseline and 2-, 4-, 6-, and 9-year follow-up. Among a broad range of demographic, psychiatric, genetic, and biopsychosocial measures, the 9-year follow-up included a detailed family history assessment; 1,425 lifetime affected NESDA participants had valid family history data. During the 9-year follow-up, full-biological siblings of NESDA participants with a lifetime affective disorder (i.e. ‘probands’) were additionally recruited to participate in the NESDA sibling study. This included a total of 380 siblings, related to 256 probands (N = 636 from 256 families). Discussion of main findings Lifetime affected patients with higher familial risk showed higher genetic vulnerability and a more unfavorable disease and psychosocial risk profile. Although a dichotomous family history measure is an informative indicator, familial risk for aff
- Published
- 2023
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