Author:
HEATH A. C.,MADDEN P. A. F.,BUCHOLZ K. K.,DINWIDDIE S. H.,SLUTSKE W. S.,BIERUT L. J.,ROHRBAUGH J. W.,STATHAM D. J.,DUNNE M. P.,WHITFIELD J. B.,MARTIN N. G.
Abstract
Background. Substantial evidence exists for an important genetic contribution to alcohol dependence
risk in women and men. It has been suggested that genetically determined differences in alcohol
sensitivity may represent one pathway by which an increase in alcohol dependence risk occurs.Methods. Telephone interview follow-up data were obtained on twins from male, female and unlike-sex twin pairs who had participated in an alcohol challenge study in 1979–81, as well as other pairs
from the same Australian twin panel surveyed by mail in 1980–82.Results. At follow-up, alcohol challenge men did not differ from other male twins from the same
age cohort on measures of lifetime psychopathology or drinking habits; but alcohol challenge
women were on average heavier drinkers than other women. Acomposite alcohol sensitivity measure,
combining subjective intoxication and increase in body-sway after alcohol challenge in 1979–81,
exhibited high heritability (60%). Parental alcoholism history was weakly associated with decreased
alcohol sensitivity in women, but not after adjustment for baseline drinking history, or in men. High
alcohol sensitivity in men was associated with substantially reduced alcohol dependence risk
(OR=0·05, 95% CI 0·01–0·39). Furthermore, significantly decreased (i.e. low) alcohol sensitivity
was observed in non-alcoholic males whose MZ co-twin had a history of alcohol dependence,
compared to other non-alcoholics. These associations remained significant in conservative analyses
that controlled for respondents' alcohol consumption levels and alcohol problems in 1979–81.Conclusions. Men (but not women) at increased genetic risk of alcohol dependence (assessed by MZ
co-twin's history of alcohol dependence) exhibited reduced alcohol sensitivity. Associations with
parental alcoholism were inconsistent.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
255 articles.
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