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Specificity of Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors for Use and Abuse/Dependence of Cannabis, Cocaine, Hallucinogens, Sedatives, Stimulants, and Opiates in Male Twins
698
Citations
19
References
2003
Year
The study aimed to determine whether genetic and shared environmental risk factors for illicit substance use and misuse are specific to each drug class or general across substances. Researchers collected lifetime use and abuse/dependence histories from 1,196 male twin pairs and applied multivariate twin modeling with Mx to separate common and substance‑specific genetic and environmental influences. Results showed a single common genetic factor strongly influenced use and abuse/dependence across all six drug classes, with only modest substance‑specific genetic effects for use, while shared environmental influences were largely common and more relevant to use than abuse/dependence, indicating that genetic and shared environmental risks are largely nonspecific and unique environmental factors determine specific substance misuse.
OBJECTIVE: Data on use and misuse of six classes of illicit substances by male twin pairs were used to examine whether genetic and shared environmental risk factors for substance use disorders are substance-specific or -nonspecific in their effect. METHOD: Lifetime history of use and abuse/dependence of cannabis, cocaine, hallucinogens, sedatives, stimulants, and opiates was assessed at personal interview in both members of 1,196 male-male twin pairs ascertained by the Virginia Twin Registry. Multivariate twin modeling of substance-nonspecific (common) and substance-specific genetic, shared environmental, and unique environmental risk factors was performed by using the program Mx. RESULTS: High levels of comorbidity involving the different substance categories were observed for both use and abuse/dependence. One common genetic factor was found to have a strong influence on risk for illicit use and abuse/dependence for all six substance classes. A modest influence of substance-specific genetic factors was seen for use but not for abuse/dependence. Shared environmental factors were more important for use than for abuse/dependence and were mediated entirely through a single common factor. CONCLUSIONS: In an adult population-based sample of male twins, both the genetic and the shared environmental effects on risk for the use and misuse of six classes of illicit substances were largely or entirely nonspecific in their effect. Environmental experiences unique to the person largely determine whether predisposed individuals will use or misuse one class of psychoactive substances rather than another.
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