4.6 Article

Genetic influences on developmental smoking trajectories

Journal

ADDICTION
Volume 107, Issue 9, Pages 1696-1704

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2012.03871.x

Keywords

Heritability; growth mixture models; liability threshold models; smoking trajectories; substance use; twins

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AA009022, AA017688, AA017915, AA011998, AA12640, HD049024, DA012854, DA14363, DA027046]

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Aims To investigate the relative contribution of genetic and environmental factors on smoking trajectory membership and to test whether individual smoking trajectories represent phenotypical thresholds of increasing genetic risk along a common genetic liability dimension. Design Prospective study of a birth cohort of female like-sex twin pairs. Setting Participants completed diagnostic interview surveys four times from adolescence (average age 16) to young adulthood (average age 25). Participants Female twins who had smoked =100 cigarettes life-time (n = 1466 regular smokers). Measurements Number of cigarettes smoked per day during the heaviest period of smoking (two waves) or during the past 12 months (two waves). Findings A four-trajectory class solution provided the best fit to cigarette consumption data and was characterized by low (n = 564, 38.47%), moderate (n = 366, 24.97%) and high-level smokers (n = 197, 13.44%), and smokers who increased their smoking from adolescence to young adulthood (n = 339, 23.12%). The best genetic model fit was a three-category model that comprised the low, a combined increasing + moderate and high trajectories. This trajectory categorization was heritable (72.7%), with no evidence for significant contribution from shared environmental factors. Conclusions The way in which smoking patterns develop in adolescence has a high level of heritability.

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