Author:
KENDLER K. S.,NEALE M. C.,SULLIVAN P.,COREY L. A.,GARDNER C. O.,PRESCOTT C. A.
Abstract
Background. The development of drug dependence requires
prior initiation. What is the relationship
between the risk factors for initiation and dependence?Methods. Using smoking as a model addiction, we assessed smoking
initiation (SI) and nicotine
dependence (ND) by personal interview in 1898 female twins from the population-based
Virginia
Twin Registry. We developed a twin structural equation model that estimates
the correlation
between the liability to SI and the liability to ND, given SI.Results. The liabilities to SI and ND were substantially correlated
but not identical. Heritable
factors played an important aetiological role in SI and in ND. While the
majority of genetic risk
factors for ND were shared with SI, a distinct set of familial factors,
which were probably partly
genetic, solely influenced the risk for ND. SI was associated with low
levels of education and
religiosity, high levels of neuroticism and extroversion and a history
of a wide range of psychiatric
disorders. ND was associated with low levels of education, extroversion,
mastery, and self-esteem,
high levels of neuroticism and dependency and a history of mood and alcohol
use disorders.Conclusions. The aetiological factors that influence SI and
ND, while overlapping, are not perfectly
correlated. One set of genetic factors plays a significant aetiological
role in both SI and ND, while
another set of familial factors, probably in part genetic, solely influences
ND. Some risk
factors for SI and ND impact similarly on both stages, some act at only
one stage and others impact
differently and even in opposite directions at the two stages. The pathway
to substance dependence
is complex and involves multiple genetic and environmental risk factors.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
395 articles.
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