Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T11:16:42.818Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Environmental influences predominate in remission from alcohol use disorder in young adult twins

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2012

V. V. McCutcheon*
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
J. D. Grant
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
A. C. Heath
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
K. K. Bucholz
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
C. E. Sartor
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA
E. C. Nelson
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
P. A. F. Madden
Affiliation:
Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA
N. G. Martin
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Queensland Institute for Medical Research, Brisbane, Australia
*
*Address for correspondence: V. V. McCutcheon, Ph.D., Midwest Alcoholism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 South Euclid Ave., Campus Box 8134, St Louis, MO 63110, USA. (Email: [email protected])

Abstract

Background

Familial influences on remission from alcohol use disorder (AUD) have been studied using family history of AUD rather than family history of remission. The current study used a remission phenotype in a twin sample to examine the relative contributions of genetic and environmental influences to remission.

Method

The sample comprised 6183 twins with an average age of 30 years from the Australian Twin Registry. Lifetime history of alcohol abuse and dependence symptoms and symptom recency were assessed with a structured telephone interview. AUD was defined broadly and narrowly as history of two or more or three or more abuse or dependence symptoms. Remission was defined as absence of symptoms at time of interview among individuals with lifetime AUD. Standard bivariate genetic analyses were conducted to derive estimates of genetic and environmental influences on AUD and remission.

Results

Environmental influences alone accounted for remission in males and for 89% of influences on remission in females, with 11% due to genetic influences shared with AUD, which decreased the likelihood of remission. For women, more than 80% of influences on remission were distinct from influences on AUD, and environmental influences were from individual experiences only. For men, just over 50% of influences on remission were distinct from those on AUD, and the influence of environments shared with the co-twin were substantial. The results for the broad and narrow phenotypes were similar.

Conclusions

The current study establishes young adult remission as a phenotype distinct from AUD and highlights the importance of environmental influences on remission.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

APA (2010). DSM-5 Development: Alcohol Use Disorder. American Psychiatric Association (www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevision/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=452). Accessed 14 June 2011.Google Scholar
Bischof, G, Rumpf, HJ, Hapke, U, Meyer, C, John, U (2001) Factors influencing remission from alcohol dependence without formal help in a representative population sample. Addiction 96, 13271336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bottlender, M, Soyka, M (2005). Outpatient alcoholism treatment: predictors of outcome after 3 years. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 80, 8389.Google Scholar
Bucholz, KK, Cadoret, R, Cloninger, CR, Dinwiddie, SH, Hesselbrock, VM, Nurnberger, Jr. JI, Reich, T, Schmidt, I, Schuckit, MA (1994). A new, semi-structured psychiatric interview for use in genetic linkage studies: a report on the reliability of the SSAGA. Journal of Studies on Alcohol 55, 149158.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Charney, DA, Zikos, E, Gill, KJ (2010). Early recovery from alcohol dependence: factors that promote or impede abstinence. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 38, 4250.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, DA (1996). Correlates of past-year status among treated and untreated persons with former alcohol dependence: United States, 1992. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 20, 771779.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, DA, Goldstein, RB, Grant, BF (2007). Rates and correlates of relapse among individuals in remission from DSM-IV alcohol dependence: a 3-year follow-up. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 31, 20362045.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, DA, Grant, BF, Stinson, FS, Chou, PS (2006). Maturing out of alcohol dependence: the impact of transitional life events. Journal of Studies on Alcohol 67, 195203.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, DA, Grant, BF, Stinson, FS, Chou, PS, Huang, B, Ruan, WJ (2005). Recovery from DSM-IV alcohol dependence: United States, 2001-2002. Addiction 100, 281292.Google Scholar
Ehlers, CL, Wall, TL, Betancourt, M, Gilder, DA (2004). The clinical course of alcoholism in 243 Mission Indians. American Journal of Psychiatry 161, 12041210.Google Scholar
Gilder, DA, Lau, P, Corey, L, Ehlers, CL (2008). Factors associated with remission from alcohol dependence in an American Indian community group. American Journal of Psychiatry 165, 11721178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, JD, Agrawal, A, Bucholz, KK, Madden, PA, Pergadia, ML, Nelson, EC, Lynskey, MT, Todd, RD, Todorov, AA, Hansell, NK, Whitfield, JB, Martin, NG, Heath, AC (2009). Alcohol consumption indices of genetic risk for alcohol dependence. Biological Psychiatry 66, 795800.Google Scholar
Han, C, McGue, MK, Iacono, WG (1999). Lifetime tobacco, alcohol and other substance use in adolescent Minnesota twins: univariate and multivariate behavioral genetic analyses. Addiction 94, 981993.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heath, AC, Bucholz, KK, Madden, PA, Dinwiddie, SH, Slutske, WS, Bierut, LJ, Statham, DJ, Dunne, MP, Whitfield, JB, Martin, NG (1997). Genetic and environmental contributions to alcohol dependence risk in a national twin sample: consistency of findings in women and men. Psychological Medicine 27, 13811396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, AC, Martin, NG, Lynskey, MT, Todorov, AA, Madden, PA (2002). Estimating two-stage models for genetic influences on alcohol, tobacco or drug use initiation and dependence vulnerability in twin and family data. Twin Research 5, 113124.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hesselbrock, M, Easton, C, Bucholz, KK, Schuckit, M, Hesselbrock, V (1999). A validity study of the SSAGA – a comparison with the SCAN. Addiction 94, 13611370.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kendler, KS, Neale, MC, Heath, AC, Kessler, RC, Eaves, LJ (1994). A twin-family study of alcoholism in women. American Journal of Psychiatry 151, 707715.Google ScholarPubMed
Knop, J, Penick, EC, Jensen, P, Nickel, EJ, Gabrielli, WF, Mednick, SA, Schulsinger, F (2003). Risk factors that predicted problem drinking in Danish men at age thirty. Journal of Studies on Alcohol 64, 745755.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Knop, J, Penick, EC, Nickel, EJ, Mednick, SA, Jensen, P, Manzardo, AM, Gabrielli, WF (2007). Paternal alcoholism predicts the occurrence but not the remission of alcoholic drinking: a 40-year follow-up. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 116, 386393.Google Scholar
Knopik, VS, Heath, AC, Madden, PA, Bucholz, KK, Slutske, WS, Nelson, EC, Statham, D, Whitfield, JB, Martin, NG (2004). Genetic effects on alcohol dependence risk: re-evaluating the importance of psychiatric and other heritable risk factors. Psychological Medicine 34, 15191530.Google Scholar
Lopez-Quintero, C, Hasin, DS, De Los Cobos, JP, Pines, A, Wang, S, Grant, BF, Blanco, C (2011). Probability and predictors of remission from life-time nicotine, alcohol, cannabis or cocaine dependence: results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. Addiction 106, 657669.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lynskey, MT, Heath, AC, Bucholz, KK, Slutske, WS, Madden, PA, Nelson, EC, Statham, DJ, Martin, NG (2003). Escalation of drug use in early-onset cannabis users vs co-twin controls. Journal of the American Medical Association 289, 427433.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moos, RH, Moos, BS (2006). Rates and predictors of relapse after natural and treated remission from alcohol use disorders. Addiction 101, 212222.Google Scholar
Neale, MC, Boker, SM, Xie, G, Maes, HH (2003). Mx: Statistical Modeling. Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Commonwealth University: Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Neale, MC, Cardon, LR (eds) (1992). Methodology for Genetic Studies of Twins and Families. Kluwer Academic: Dordrecht.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penick, EC, Knop, J, Nickel, EJ, Jensen, P, Manzardo, AM, Lykke-Mortensen, E, Gabrielli, WF (2010). Do premorbid predictors of alcohol dependence also predict the failure to recover from alcoholism? Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs 71, 685694.Google Scholar
Prescott, CA, Aggen, SH, Kendler, KS (1999). Sex differences in the sources of genetic liability to alcohol abuse and dependence in a population-based sample of U.S. twins. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 23, 11361144.Google Scholar
Prescott, CA, Hewitt, JK, Truett, KR, Heath, AC, Neale, MC, Eaves, LJ (1994). Genetic and environmental influences on lifetime alcohol-related problems in a volunteer sample of older twins. Journal of Studies on Alcohol 55, 184202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prescott, CA, Kendler, KS (1999). Genetic and environmental contributions to alcohol abuse and dependence in a population-based sample of male twins. American Journal of Psychiatry 156, 3440.Google Scholar
Prescott, CA, Kuhn, JW, Pederson, NL (2007). Twin pair resemblance for psychiatric hospitalization in the Swedish Twin Registry: a 32-year follow-up study of 29,602 twin pairs. Behavior Genetics 37, 547558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rose, RJ, Dick, DM, Viken, RJ, Kaprio, J (2001 a). Gene-environment interaction in patterns of adolescent drinking: regional residency moderates longitudinal influences on alcohol use. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 25, 637643.Google ScholarPubMed
Rose, RJ, Dick, DM, Viken, RJ, Pulkkinen, L, Kaprio, J (2001 b). Drinking or abstaining at age 14? A genetic epidemiological study. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 25, 15941604.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rose, RJ, Kaprio, J, Winter, T, Koskenvuo, M, Viken, RJ (1999). Familial and socioregional environmental effects on abstinence from alcohol at age sixteen. Journal of Studies on Alcohol: Supplement 13, 6374.Google ScholarPubMed
Sartor, CE, Lynskey, MT, Bucholz, KK, Madden, PA, Martin, NG, Heath, AC (2009). Timing of first alcohol use and alcohol dependence: evidence of common genetic influences. Addiction 104, 15121518.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sartor, CE, McCutcheon, VV, Pommer, NE, Nelson, EC, Grant, JD, Duncan, AE, Waldron, M, Bucholz, KK, Madden, PA, Heath, AC (2011). Common genetic and environmental contributions to post-traumatic stress disorder and alcohol dependence in young women. Psychological Medicine 41, 1497–505.Google Scholar
Schuckit, MA, Smith, TL, Danko, GP, Bucholz, KK, Reich, T, Bierut, L (2001). Five-year clinical course associated with DSM-IV alcohol abuse or dependence in a large group of men and women. American Journal of Psychiatry 158, 10841090.Google Scholar
van Beek, JH, Kendler, KS, de Moor, MH, Geels, LM, Bartels, M, Vink, JM, van den Berg, SM, Willemsen, G, Boomsma, DI (2012). Stable genetic effects on symptoms of alcohol abuse and dependence from adolescence into early adulthood. Behavior Genetics 42, 4056.Google Scholar
Viken, RJ, Kaprio, J, Koskenvuo, M, Rose, RJ (1999). Longitudinal analyses of the determinants of drinking and of drinking to intoxication in adolescent twins. Behavior Genetics 29, 455461.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Supplementary material: File

McCutcheon supplementary material

Appendix

Download McCutcheon supplementary material(File)
File 12.9 KB