학술논문

Association between genetic and socioenvironmental risk for schizophrenia during upbringing in a UK longitudinal cohort
Document Type
article
Source
Psychological Medicine. 52(8)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Psychology
Serious Mental Illness
Brain Disorders
Genetics
Pediatric
Prevention
Schizophrenia
Mental Health
2.4 Surveillance and distribution
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Psychotic Disorders
Residence Characteristics
Social Environment
United Kingdom
Childhood and adolescence
family psychiatric history
gene-environment correlation
neighborhood
polygenic risk scores
psychosis
social drift
urbanicity
Neurosciences
Public Health and Health Services
Psychiatry
Clinical sciences
Biological psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAssociations of socioenvironmental features like urbanicity and neighborhood deprivation with psychosis are well-established. An enduring question, however, is whether these associations are causal. Genetic confounding could occur due to downward mobility of individuals at high genetic risk for psychiatric problems into disadvantaged environments.MethodsWe examined correlations of five indices of genetic risk [polygenic risk scores (PRS) for schizophrenia and depression, maternal psychotic symptoms, family psychiatric history, and zygosity-based latent genetic risk] with multiple area-, neighborhood-, and family-level risks during upbringing. Data were from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study, a nationally-representative cohort of 2232 British twins born in 1994-1995 and followed to age 18 (93% retention). Socioenvironmental risks included urbanicity, air pollution, neighborhood deprivation, neighborhood crime, neighborhood disorder, social cohesion, residential mobility, family poverty, and a cumulative environmental risk scale. At age 18, participants were privately interviewed about psychotic experiences.ResultsHigher genetic risk on all indices was associated with riskier environments during upbringing. For example, participants with higher schizophrenia PRS (OR = 1.19, 95% CI = 1.06-1.33), depression PRS (OR = 1.20, 95% CI = 1.08-1.34), family history (OR = 1.25, 95% CI = 1.11-1.40), and latent genetic risk (OR = 1.21, 95% CI = 1.07-1.38) had accumulated more socioenvironmental risks for schizophrenia by age 18. However, associations between socioenvironmental risks and psychotic experiences mostly remained significant after covariate adjustment for genetic risk.ConclusionGenetic risk is correlated with socioenvironmental risk for schizophrenia during upbringing, but the associations between socioenvironmental risk and adolescent psychotic experiences appear, at present, to exist above and beyond this gene-environment correlation.