Exposure to paternal alcoholism does not predict development of alcohol-use disorders in offspring: evidence from an offspring-of-twins study.

Alexis E Duncan, Jeffrey Scherrer, Qiang Fu, Kathleen Keenan Bucholz, Andrew C Heath, William R True, Jon R Haber, Donelle Howell, Theodore Jacob
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引用次数: 25

Abstract

Objective: Using an offspring-of-twins design, we tested the hypothesis that exposure to paternal alcoholism during the child's first 12 years will increase offspring risk for subsequent alcohol-use disorders (AUD).

Method: Structured psychiatric interviews assessed history of psychiatric and substance-use disorders in Vietnam Era Twin Registry fathers (n = 512), their offspring (n = 877), and mothers of the offspring (n = 507). Exposure was defined as the fathers' endorsement of any Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), Fourth Edition, AUD symptom, according to the Lifetime Drinking History assessment (administered in 1999), at any time between off- spring ages 0-12 years; all fathers had satisfied DSM, Third Edition, Revised (DSM-III-R), criteria for alcohol dependence in a 1992 diagnostic interview. Cox proportional hazards models were fit to predict time to first symptom of abuse/dependence in offspring.

Results: Off- spring exposed to paternal alcoholism were significantly more likely to develop an AUD when compared with offspring of nonalcoholic fathers (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.51; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.10-2.07). Although offspring unexposed to paternal alcoholism did not significantly differ from control offspring (HR = 1.50, 95% CI: 0.93-2.41), the magnitude of association was similar to that in the exposed offspring. There were no significant differences in AUD between offspring of alcoholics who were exposed and those who were not exposed to paternal alcoholism, as long as fathers had satisfied DSM-III-R criteria for alcohol dependence at some point in their lives.

Conclusions: There does not appear to be a relationship between exposure to paternal alcoholism during childhood and development of an AUD in offspring. Genetic and high-risk environmental factors that are correlated with lifetime paternal alcoholism may be stronger predictors of offspring AUD than fathers' problem drinking. Future research should be encouraged, using more comprehensive analyses, to examine the role of family genetic influences and other family environmental influences on offspring alcohol outcomes.

暴露于父亲酗酒不能预测后代酒精使用障碍的发展:来自双胞胎后代研究的证据。
目的:采用双胞胎后代设计,我们检验了在孩子头12年暴露于父亲酒精中毒会增加后代随后酒精使用障碍(AUD)的风险的假设。方法:通过结构化精神病学访谈评估越南时代双胞胎登记的父亲(n = 512)、他们的后代(n = 877)和后代的母亲(n = 507)的精神病史和物质使用障碍。暴露被定义为父亲认可任何精神障碍诊断与统计手册(DSM),第四版,AUD症状,根据终身饮酒史评估(1999年实施),在子女年龄0-12岁之间的任何时间;在1992年的一次诊断访谈中,所有父亲都满足DSM第三版修订版(DSM- iii - r)的酒精依赖标准。Cox比例风险模型拟合预测后代出现滥用/依赖症状的时间。结果:与非酗酒父亲的后代相比,暴露于父亲酒精中毒的后代更容易发生AUD(风险比[HR] = 1.51;95%置信区间[CI]: 1.10-2.07)。尽管未暴露于父亲酒精中毒的后代与对照后代没有显著差异(HR = 1.50, 95% CI: 0.93-2.41),但相关程度与暴露于父亲酒精中毒的后代相似。只要父亲在生活的某个阶段满足DSM-III-R酒精依赖标准,暴露于父亲酒精中毒和未暴露于父亲酒精中毒的酗酒者后代的AUD没有显著差异。结论:在儿童时期暴露于父亲酒精中毒与后代AUD的发展之间似乎没有关系。与父亲终生酗酒相关的遗传和高危环境因素可能比父亲酗酒问题更能预测后代AUD。应该鼓励未来的研究,使用更全面的分析,来检查家庭遗传影响和其他家庭环境影响对后代酒精结果的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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