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Associations between polygenic risk of substance use and use disorder and alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine use in adolescence and young adulthood in a longitudinal twin study

Authors :
D. Angus Clark
Brian M. Hicks
Seon-Kyeong Jang
William G. Iacono
Matt McGue
Sylia Wilson
Jonathan D. Schaefer
Mengzhen Liu
Joseph D. Deak
Scott I. Vrieze
Source :
Psychological Medicine. 53:2296-2306
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundRecent well-powered genome-wide association studies have enhanced prediction of substance use outcomes via polygenic scores (PGSs). Here, we test (1) whether these scores contribute to prediction over-and-above family history, (2) the extent to which PGS prediction reflects inherited genetic variation v. demography (population stratification and assortative mating) and indirect genetic effects of parents (genetic nurture), and (3) whether PGS prediction is mediated by behavioral disinhibition prior to substance use onset.MethodsPGSs for alcohol, cannabis, and nicotine use/use disorder were calculated for Minnesota Twin Family Study participants (N = 2483, 1565 monozygotic/918 dizygotic). Twins' parents were assessed for histories of substance use disorder. Twins were assessed for behavioral disinhibition at age 11 and substance use from ages 14 to 24. PGS prediction of substance use was examined using linear mixed-effects, within-twin pair, and structural equation models.ResultsNearly all PGS measures were associated with multiple types of substance use independently of family history. However, most within-pair PGS prediction estimates were substantially smaller than the corresponding between-pair estimates, suggesting that prediction is driven in part by demography and indirect genetic effects of parents. Path analyses indicated the effects of both PGSs and family history on substance use were mediated via disinhibition in preadolescence.ConclusionsPGSs capturing risk of substance use and use disorder can be combined with family history measures to augment prediction of substance use outcomes. Results highlight indirect sources of genetic associations and preadolescent elevations in behavioral disinhibition as two routes through which these scores may relate to substance use.

Details

ISSN :
14698978 and 00332917
Volume :
53
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3119c0f833778d2884c4aefb4724e2e7