Affiliation:
1. King's College London
2. University College London
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Considering the co‐morbidity of major psychiatric disorders and intelligence with smoking, to increase our understanding of why some people take up smoking or continue to smoke, while others stop smoking without progressing to nicotine dependence, we investigated the genetic propensities to psychiatric disorders and intelligence as determinants of smoking initiation, heaviness of smoking and smoking cessation in older adults from the general population.
Results: One standard deviation increase in MDD-PGS was associated with increased odds of being a moderate to heavy smoker (odds ratio [OR]=1.11, SE=0.04, 95%CI=1.00-1.24, p=0.028). There were no other significant associations between SZ-PGS, BD-PGS, or IQ-PGS and smoking initiation, heaviness of smoking and smoking cessation in older adults from the general population in the UK.
Conclusions: Smoking is the behaviour that does not appear to share common genetic ground with schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, and intelligence in older adults, which may suggest that it is more likely to be modifiable by smoking cessation interventions. Once started to smoke, older adults with a higher polygenic predisposition to major depressive disorders are more likely to be moderate to heavy smokers, implying that these adults may require targeted smoking cessation services.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference53 articles.
1. Current cigarette smoking prevalence among working adults–United States, 2004–2010;MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep,2011
2. Organisation WH. Global Health Estimates 2015: Deaths by Cause, Age, Sex, by Country and by Region, 2000–2015 2016: Geneva: World Health Organization.
3. Tobacco smoking in older people;Allen S;Reviews in Clinical Gerontology,2009
4. Cigarette smoking among the elderly: disease consequences and the benefits of cessation;Burns DM;Am J Health Promot,2000
5. Statistics OfN. Living in Britain: Results from the 2000 General Household Survey. London: The Stationery Office; 2001.