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Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation

BACKGROUND: Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. METHODS: We examined associations among ACEs, mood/a...

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Autores principales: Kranzler, Henry, Davis, Christal, Feinn, Richard, Jinwala, Zeal, Khan, Yousef, Oikonomou, Ariadni, Silva-Lopez, Damaris, Burton, Isabel, Dixon, Morgan, Milone, Jackson, Ramirez, Sarah, Shifman, Naomi, Levey, Daniel, Gelernter, Joel, Hartwell, Emily, Kember, Rachel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10635374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961429
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3483320/v1
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author Kranzler, Henry
Davis, Christal
Feinn, Richard
Jinwala, Zeal
Khan, Yousef
Oikonomou, Ariadni
Silva-Lopez, Damaris
Burton, Isabel
Dixon, Morgan
Milone, Jackson
Ramirez, Sarah
Shifman, Naomi
Levey, Daniel
Gelernter, Joel
Hartwell, Emily
Kember, Rachel
author_facet Kranzler, Henry
Davis, Christal
Feinn, Richard
Jinwala, Zeal
Khan, Yousef
Oikonomou, Ariadni
Silva-Lopez, Damaris
Burton, Isabel
Dixon, Morgan
Milone, Jackson
Ramirez, Sarah
Shifman, Naomi
Levey, Daniel
Gelernter, Joel
Hartwell, Emily
Kember, Rachel
author_sort Kranzler, Henry
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. METHODS: We examined associations among ACEs, mood/anxiety disorders, and substance dependence in 12,668 individuals (44.9% female, 42.5% African American/Black, 42.1% European American/White). We generated latent variables for each phenotype and modeled direct and indirect effects of ACEs on substance dependence, mediated by mood/anxiety disorders (forward or “self-medication” model) and of ACEs on mood/anxiety disorders, mediated by substance dependence (reverse or “substance-induced” model). In a sub-sample, we also generated polygenic scores for substance dependence and mood/anxiety disorder factors, which we tested as moderators in the mediation models. RESULTS: Although there were significant indirect effects in both directions, mediation by mood/anxiety disorders (forward model) was greater than by substance dependence (reverse model). Greater genetic risk for substance dependence was associated with a weaker direct effect of ACEs on substance dependence in both the African- and European-ancestry groups (i.e., gene-environment interaction) and a weaker indirect effect in European-ancestry individuals (i.e., moderated mediation). CONCLUSION: We found greater evidence that substance dependence results from self-medication of mood/anxiety disorders than that mood/anxiety disorders are substance induced. Among individuals at higher genetic risk for substance dependence who are more likely to develop a dependence diagnosis, ACEs exert less of an effect in promoting that outcome. Following exposure to ACEs, multiple pathways lead to mood/anxiety disorders and substance dependence. Specification of these pathways could inform individually targeted prevention and treatment approaches.
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spelling pubmed-106353742023-11-13 Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation Kranzler, Henry Davis, Christal Feinn, Richard Jinwala, Zeal Khan, Yousef Oikonomou, Ariadni Silva-Lopez, Damaris Burton, Isabel Dixon, Morgan Milone, Jackson Ramirez, Sarah Shifman, Naomi Levey, Daniel Gelernter, Joel Hartwell, Emily Kember, Rachel Res Sq Article BACKGROUND: Adverse childhood events (ACEs) contribute to the development of mood and anxiety disorders and substance dependence. However, the extent to which these effects are direct or indirect and whether genetic risk moderates them is unclear. METHODS: We examined associations among ACEs, mood/anxiety disorders, and substance dependence in 12,668 individuals (44.9% female, 42.5% African American/Black, 42.1% European American/White). We generated latent variables for each phenotype and modeled direct and indirect effects of ACEs on substance dependence, mediated by mood/anxiety disorders (forward or “self-medication” model) and of ACEs on mood/anxiety disorders, mediated by substance dependence (reverse or “substance-induced” model). In a sub-sample, we also generated polygenic scores for substance dependence and mood/anxiety disorder factors, which we tested as moderators in the mediation models. RESULTS: Although there were significant indirect effects in both directions, mediation by mood/anxiety disorders (forward model) was greater than by substance dependence (reverse model). Greater genetic risk for substance dependence was associated with a weaker direct effect of ACEs on substance dependence in both the African- and European-ancestry groups (i.e., gene-environment interaction) and a weaker indirect effect in European-ancestry individuals (i.e., moderated mediation). CONCLUSION: We found greater evidence that substance dependence results from self-medication of mood/anxiety disorders than that mood/anxiety disorders are substance induced. Among individuals at higher genetic risk for substance dependence who are more likely to develop a dependence diagnosis, ACEs exert less of an effect in promoting that outcome. Following exposure to ACEs, multiple pathways lead to mood/anxiety disorders and substance dependence. Specification of these pathways could inform individually targeted prevention and treatment approaches. American Journal Experts 2023-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10635374/ /pubmed/37961429 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3483320/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Kranzler, Henry
Davis, Christal
Feinn, Richard
Jinwala, Zeal
Khan, Yousef
Oikonomou, Ariadni
Silva-Lopez, Damaris
Burton, Isabel
Dixon, Morgan
Milone, Jackson
Ramirez, Sarah
Shifman, Naomi
Levey, Daniel
Gelernter, Joel
Hartwell, Emily
Kember, Rachel
Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title_full Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title_fullStr Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title_full_unstemmed Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title_short Adverse Childhood Events, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, and Substance Dependence: Gene x Environment Effects and Moderated Mediation
title_sort adverse childhood events, mood and anxiety disorders, and substance dependence: gene x environment effects and moderated mediation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10635374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961429
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3483320/v1
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