학술논문

Alcohol and cigarette smoking consumption as genetic proxies for alcohol misuse and nicotine dependence
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Health Sciences
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Tobacco
Substance Misuse
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Brain Disorders
Clinical Research
Prevention
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
Stroke
Cardiovascular
Cancer
Oral and gastrointestinal
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Alcohol Drinking
Alcoholism
Cigarette Smoking
Cohort Studies
Databases
Genetic
Female
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Male
Phenotype
Tobacco Products
Tobacco Use Disorder
United Kingdom
White People
Alcohol
Nicotine
Consumption
Dependence
Polygenic analysis
PheWAS
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Substance Abuse
Biochemistry and cell biology
Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
PurposeTo investigate the role of consumption phenotypes as genetic proxies for alcohol misuse and nicotine dependence.MethodsWe leveraged GWAS data from well-powered studies of consumption, alcohol misuse, and nicotine dependence phenotypes measured in individuals of European ancestry from the UK Biobank (UKB) and other population-based cohorts (largest total N = 263,954), and performed genetic correlations within a medical-center cohort, BioVU (N = 66,915). For alcohol, we used quantitative measures of consumption and misuse via AUDIT from UKB. For smoking, we used cigarettes per day from UKB and non-UKB cohorts comprising the GSCAN consortium, and nicotine dependence via ICD codes from UKB and Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence from non-UKB cohorts.ResultsIn a large phenome-wide association study, we show that smoking consumption and dependence phenotypes show similar strongly negatively associations with a plethora of diseases, whereas alcohol consumption shows patterns of genetic association that diverge from those of alcohol misuse.ConclusionsOur study suggests that cigarette smoking consumption, which can be easily measured in the general population, may be good a genetic proxy for nicotine dependence, whereas alcohol consumption is not a direct genetic proxy of alcohol misuse.