Associations Between ADHD and Psychoactive Substance use Disorders:Findings from a Longitudinal Study of High-Risk Siblings of ADHD Children
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Keyword
Psychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychology
Medicine (miscellaneous)
ADHD, DRD5, age at onset, family-based association, PBAT, candidate gene
Journal title
American Journal on AddictionsDate Published
1997-01Publication Volume
6Publication Issue
4Publication Begin page
318Publication End page
329
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within candidate genes for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with the age at onset for ADHD. One hundred and forty-three SNPs were genotyped across five candidate genes (DRD5, SLC6A3, HTR1B, SNAP25, DRD4) for ADHD in 229 families with at least one affected offspring. SNPs with the highest estimated power to detect an association with age at onset were selected for each candidate gene, using a power-based screening procedure that does not compromise the nominal significance level. A time-to-onset analysis for family-based samples was performed on these SNPs to determine if an association exists with age at onset for ADHD. Seven consecutive SNPs surrounding the D5 dopamine receptor gene (DRD5), were associated with the age at onset for ADHD; FDR adjusted q-values ranged from 0.008 to 0.023. This analysis indicates that individuals with the risk genotype develop ADHD earlier than individuals with any other genotype. A haplotype analysis across the 6 significant SNPs that were in linkage disequilibrium with one another, CTCATA, was also found to be significant (p-value = 0.02). We did not observe significant associations with age at onset for the other candidate loci tested. Although definitive conclusions await independent replication, these results suggest that a variant in DRD5 may affect age at onset for ADHDDOI
10.3109/10550499709005063ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3109/10550499709005063
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- Creative Commons