The heritability of alcohol use disorders: a meta-analysis of twin and adoption studies

B Verhulst, MC Neale, KS Kendler - Psychological medicine, 2015 - cambridge.org
Psychological medicine, 2015cambridge.org
Background. To clarify the role of genetic and environmental risk factors in alcohol use
disorders (AUDs), we performed a meta-analysis of twin and adoption studies and explored
the impact of sex, assessment method (interview v. hospital/population records), and study
design (twin v. adoption study) on heritability estimates. Method. The literature was searched
for all unique twin and adoption studies of AUD and identified 12 twin and five adoption
studies. The data were then reconstructed and analyzed using ordinal data full information …
Background
To clarify the role of genetic and environmental risk factors in alcohol use disorders (AUDs), we performed a meta-analysis of twin and adoption studies and explored the impact of sex, assessment method (interview v. hospital/population records), and study design (twin v. adoption study) on heritability estimates.
Method
The literature was searched for all unique twin and adoption studies of AUD and identified 12 twin and five adoption studies. The data were then reconstructed and analyzed using ordinal data full information maximum likelihood in the OpenMx program. Heterogeneity was tested with likelihood ratio tests by equating the parameters across studies.
Results
There was no evidence for heterogeneity by study design, sex or assessment method. The best-fit estimate of the heritability of AUD was 0.49 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.43–0.53], and the proportion of shared environmental variance was 0.10 (95% CI 0.03–0.16). Estimates of unique environmental proportions of variance differed significantly across studies.
Conclusions
AUD is approximately 50% heritable. The multiple genetically informative studies of this syndrome have produced consistent results that support the validity of this heritability estimate, especially given the different potential methodological weaknesses of twin and adoption designs, and of assessments of AUD based on personal interviews v. official records. We also found evidence for modest shared environmental effects suggesting that environmental factors also contribute to the familial aggregation of AUDs.
Cambridge University Press