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Specificity in genetic and environmental risk for prescription opioid misuse and heroin use.

Authors :
Dash, Genevieve F.
Gizer, Ian R.
Martin, Nicholas G.
Slutske, Wendy S.
Source :
Psychological Medicine. Oct2023, Vol. 53 Issue 14, p6828-6837. 10p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Many studies aggregate prescription opioid misuse (POM) and heroin use into a single phenotype, but emerging evidence suggests that their genetic and environmental influences may be partially distinct. Methods: In total, 7164 individual twins (84.12% complete pairs; 59.81% female; mean age = 30.58 years) from the Australian Twin Registry reported their lifetime misuse of prescription opioids, stimulants, and sedatives, and lifetime use of heroin, cannabis, cocaine/crack, illicit stimulants, hallucinogens, inhalants, solvents, and dissociatives via telephone interview. Independent pathway models (IPMs) and common pathway models (CPMs) partitioned the variance of drug use phenotypes into general and drug-specific genetic (a), common environmental (c), and unique environmental factors (e). Results: An IPM with one general a and one general e factor and a one-factor CPM provided comparable fit to the data. General factors accounted for 55% (a = 14%, e = 41%) and 79% (a = 64%, e = 15%) of the respective variation in POM and heroin use in the IPM, and 25% (a = 12%, c = 8%, e = 5%) and 80% (a = 38%, c = 27%, e = 15%) of the respective variation in POM and heroin use in the CPM. Across both models, POM emerged with substantial drug-specific genetic influence (26–39% of total phenotypic variance; 69–74% of genetic variance); heroin use did not (0% of total phenotypic variance; 0% of genetic variance in both models). Prescription sedative misuse also demonstrated significant drug-specific genetic variance. Conclusions: Genetic variation in POM, but not heroin use, is predominantly drug-specific. Misuse of prescription medications that reduce experiences of subjective distress may be partially influenced by sources of genetic variation separate from illicit drug use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00332917
Volume :
53
Issue :
14
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Psychological Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173276670
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329172300034X