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- Title
Association of parental divorce, discord, and polygenic risk with children's alcohol initiation and lifetime risk for alcohol use disorder.
- Authors
Kuo, Sally I‐Chun; Thomas, Nathaniel S.; Aliev, Fazil; Bucholz, Kathleen K.; Dick, Danielle M.; McCutcheon, Vivia V.; Meyers, Jacquelyn L.; Chan, Grace; Kamarajan, Chella; Kramer, John R.; Hesselbrock, Victor; Plawecki, Martin H.; Porjesz, Bernice; Tischfield, Jay; Salvatore, Jessica E.
- Abstract
Background: Parental divorce and discord are associated with poorer alcohol‐related outcomes for offspring. However, not all children exposed to these stressors develop alcohol problems. Our objective was to test gene‐by‐environment interaction effects whereby children's genetic risk for alcohol problems modifies the effects of parental divorce and discord to predict alcohol outcomes. Methods: The sample included European (EA; N = 5608, 47% male, Mage ~ 36 years) and African (AA; N = 1714, 46% female, Mage ~ 33 years) ancestry participants from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism. Outcomes included age at initiation of regular drinking and lifetime DSM‐5 alcohol use disorder (AUD). Predictors included parental divorce, parental relationship discord, and offspring alcohol problems polygenic risk scores (PRSALC). Mixed effects Cox proportional hazard models were used to examine alcohol initiation and generalized linear mixed effects models were used to examine lifetime AUD. Tests of PRS moderation of the effects of parental divorce/relationship discord on alcohol outcomes were examined on multiplicative and additive scales. Results: Among EA participants, parental divorce, parental discord, and higher PRSALC were associated with earlier alcohol initiation and greater lifetime AUD risk. Among AA participants, parental divorce was associated with earlier alcohol initiation and discord was associated with earlier initiation and AUD. PRSALC was not associated with either. Parental divorce/discord and PRSALC interacted on an additive scale in the EA sample, but no interactions were found in AA participants. Conclusions: Children's genetic risk for alcohol problems modifies the impact of parental divorce/discord, consistent with an additive model of diathesis–stress interaction, with some differences across ancestry.
- Subjects
ALCOHOLISM risk factors; RISK assessment; ALCOHOL drinking; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; RESEARCH funding; GENES; CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders; PARENTS; DIVORCE; PROPORTIONAL hazards models
- Publication
Alcohol: Clinical & Experimental Research, 2023, Vol 47, Issue 4, p724
- ISSN
0145-6008
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/acer.15042