Overlap and specificity of genetic and environmental influences on excessive acquisition and difficulties discarding possessions: Implications for hoarding disorder.

Ashley E Nordsletten, Benedetta Monzani, Lorena Fernández de la Cruz, Alessandra C Iervolino, Miquel A Fullana, Juliette Harris, Fruhling Rijsdijk, David Mataix-Cols
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

A reluctance to discard items, leading to severely cluttered living spaces, is the landmark feature of hoarding disorder (HD). Many, but not all, individuals with HD also excessively acquire, buy or even steal items that they do not need and for which no space is available. In DSM-5, "excessive acquisition" can be coded as a specifier of HD. Despite their consistent co-occurrence, the question of whether excessive acquisition and difficulties discarding possessions share a common etiology remains unanswered. The current study sought to flesh out this relationship by examining the extent of shared genetic and environmental influences on the association between excessive acquisition and difficulties discarding in a community sample of adult, female twins. A total of 5,022 female twins (2,529 pairs; mean age = 55.5 years) completed a self-report measure of hoarding symptoms, including items assessing excessive acquisition and difficulties discarding. The data were analyzed using bivariate twin modeling methods in the statistical program Mx. As expected, we found a strong phenotypic correlation (0.63) between excessive acquisition and difficulty discarding items. Both traits were moderately heritable. The genetic correlation between the traits was estimated to be 0.77 (95% CI: 0.69-0.85), indicating a substantial but imperfect genetic overlap. The non-shared environmental correlation (0.50 [95% CI: 0.42-0.57]), though lower, was also significant. The findings demonstrate a substantial genetic, and more modest environmental, etiological overlap between the excessive acquisition of possessions and difficulties discarding them, providing a possible explanation for their frequent co-occurrence in HD. However, given that the etiological overlap is not perfect, unique etiological influences, particularly environmental, on each phenotype seem plausible.

遗传和环境对过度获取和难以丢弃物品影响的重叠和特异性:对囤积障碍的影响。
不愿丢弃物品,导致生活空间严重混乱,这是囤积症(HD)的标志性特征。许多(但不是全部)HD患者也会过度获取、购买甚至偷窃他们不需要的物品,而这些物品又没有可用的空间。在DSM-5中,“过度获取”可以被编码为HD的一个说明符。尽管它们一直共同发生,但过度获取和难以丢弃财产是否有共同的病因仍然没有答案。目前的研究试图通过检查共同的遗传和环境影响的程度来充实这种关系,这些影响是在一个社区的成年女性双胞胎样本中过度获取和难以丢弃之间的联系。共有5022对女性双胞胎(2529对;平均年龄= 55.5岁)完成了囤积症状的自我报告测量,包括评估过度获取和难以丢弃的项目。在统计程序Mx中使用双变量双胞胎建模方法对数据进行分析。正如预期的那样,我们发现过度获取和难以丢弃物品之间存在很强的表型相关性(0.63)。这两种性状都具有中等程度的遗传性。性状之间的遗传相关性估计为0.77 (95% CI: 0.69-0.85),表明存在大量但不完美的遗传重叠。非共享环境相关性(0.50 [95% CI: 0.42-0.57])虽然较低,但也很显著。研究结果表明,在过度获得财产和难以丢弃财产之间存在大量的遗传和更适度的环境病因重叠,这可能解释了它们在HD中经常同时发生的原因。然而,考虑到病因重叠并不完美,对每种表型的独特病因影响,特别是环境影响似乎是合理的。
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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