| Literature DB >> 12875052 |
John I Nurnberger1, Tatiana Foroud, Leah Flury, Eric T Meyer, Ryan Wiegand.
Abstract
The Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) seeks to identify genes contributing to alcoholism and related traits (i.e., phenotypes), including depression. Among alcoholic subjects the COGA study found an increased prevalence of depressive syndrome (i.e., depression that may or may not occur in conjunction with increased drinking). This combination of alcoholism and depression tends to run in families. Comorbid alcoholism and depression occurred substantially more often in first-degree relatives of COGA participants with alcoholism than in relatives of control participants. Based on these data, COGA investigators defined three phenotypes--"alcoholism," "alcoholism and depression," and "alcoholism or depression"--and analyzed whether these phenotypes were linked to specific chromosomal regions. These analyses found that the "alcoholism or depression" phenotype showed significant evidence for genetic linkage to an area on chromosome 1. This suggests that a gene or genes on chromosome 1 may predispose some people to alcoholism and others to depression (which may be alcohol induced).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12875052 PMCID: PMC6683839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res Health ISSN: 1535-7414
Hypotheses About the Relationship Between Alcoholism and Affective Disorders (e.g., Depression)
| Then: | Relative risk of affective disorder in alcoholics | Relative risk of alcoholism in affective patients | Relatives of alcoholics would be at increased risk for: | Relatives of affective patients would be at increased risk for: |
| If it is hypo thesized that: | ||||
| Alcoholism is the primary disorder and affective disorder is secondary | Increases | Is unchanged | Alcoholism with secondary affective disorder | Affective disorder only |
| The affective disorder is primary and alcoholism is secondary | Is unchanged | Increases | Alcoholism only | Affective disorder with secondary alcoholism |
| Alcoholism and affective disorders develop from a common genetic predisposition | Increases | Increases | Both alcoholism and affective disorder | Both alcoholism and affective disorder |
| Genetic Subtype I (depressive spectrum disorder) | Is unchanged | Is unchanged | Alcoholism only | Both alcoholism and affective disorder |
| Genetic Subtype II (alcoholism with depression) | Increases, specifically for depressive syndrome | Is unchanged | Both alcoholism and depression | Affective disorder only |
| Alcoholism and affective disorder develop as separate illnesses | Is unchanged | Is unchanged | Alcoholism only | Affective disorder only |
Prevalence of DSM–III–R Depression and Depressive Syndrome in Adult COGA Probands and Their Alcoholic and Nonalcoholic Relatives
| COGA Probands and their Alcoholic Relatives | Nonalcoholic Relatives | Relative Risk Among COGA Probands and their Alcoholic Relatives | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Major Depression | 11.0% (257/2,337) | 10.5% (151/1,436) | 1.05 |
| Depressive Syndrome | 30.3% | 6.0% (86/1,436) | 5.05 |
| Total | 41.2% | 16.5% (237/1,436) | 2.50 |
| Major Depression | 24.2% | 22.4% | 1.08 |
| Depressive Syndrome | 32.8% | 11.3% | 2.90 |
| Total | 57.0% | 33.8% | 1.69 |
χ2 ≥ 204 (actual values 315.4, 250.9, 290.9, 204.0, from top to bottom), df = 1, p < 10−45 vs. nonalcoholic subjects.
χ2 ≥ 82 (actual values 108.6, 82.6), df = 1, p < 10−18 vs. males.
χ2 ≥ 32 (actual values 92.1, 32.4, 144.7), df = 1, p < 10−7 vs. males.
NOTE: The data are from COGA Master File 86 (1999).
Prevalence and Risk of Alcoholism and Depression in the Relatives of Alcoholic Probands and Control Subjects in the COGA Study
| Diagnosis in Relatives | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Proband Diagnosis | All Types of Alcoholism | Relative Risk of Alcoholism | All Types of Depression | Relative Risk of Depression |
| Control | 14.2% (144/1,014) | 20.9% (212/1,014) | ||
| Alcoholism Only | 29.2% (971/3,331) | 2.1 | 28.6% (952/3,331) | 1.4 |
| Alcoholism with Depressive Syndrome | 31.6% | 2.2 | 33.5% | 1.6 |
| Alcoholism with Major Depression | 32.8% | 2.3 | 39.0% | 1.9 |
p < .05 vs. alcoholism only
p < .05 vs. alcoholism with depressive syndrome All comparisons significant vs. control
NOTE: The data were derived from COGA Master file 86 (1999).
Prevalence of Alcoholism and Depression in the Relatives of Alcoholic and Control Probands in the COGA Study
| Diagnosis in Relatives | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Proband Diagnosis | Alcoholism with or without Depressive Syndrome | Major Depression Only | Alcoholism and Major Depression |
| Control | 10.2% (74/725) | 14.6% (106/725) | 2.2% (16/725) |
| Alcoholism with or without Depressive Syndrome | 25.6%a (1,112/4,348) | 13.1% (571/4,348) | 4.4%a (191/4,348) |
| Alcoholism with Major Depression | 24.0%a (132/549) | 14.2% (78/549) | 8.4% |
p < .01 vs. control
p < .001 vs. alcoholism only and control
NOTE: The data were derived from COGA Master File 86 (1999).
Chronological Order of Disease Development in COGA Participants with Alcoholism and an Affective Disorder (i.e., Major Depression or Mania)
| Onset of Alcoholism First | Onset of Depression First | Same Time of Onset for Both Disorders | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Males (N = 267) | 143 (53.6%) | 104 (39.0%) | 20 (7.5%) |
| Females (N = 325) | 115 (35.4%) | 193 (59.4%) | 17 (5.2%) |
| Total (N = 592) | 258 (43.6%) | 297 (50.2%) | 37 (6.3%) |
| Males (N = 33) | 22 (66.7%) | 9 (23.7%) | 2 (6.1%) |
| Females (N = 33) | 13 (39.4%) | 19 (57.6%) | 1 (3.0%) |
| Total (N = 66) | 35 (53.0%) | 28 (42.4%) | 3 (4.5%) |
NOTE: The diagnoses and age of onset are based on data from COGA Master File 118 (2002).
Relationship Between Behavioral Depression, as Indicated by Behavior in the “Forced Swim” and “Stress–Open Field” Tests, and Voluntary Alcohol Consumption in Genetically Defined Rodent Strains
| Strain | Forced Swim Test | Stress–Open Field Test | Voluntary Alcohol Consumption |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flinders sensitive rat | |||
| P rat | −− | ||
| Fawn-hooded rat | |||
| C57 mouse |
KEY: ? = response unknown
+ = sensitive to behavioral depression; voluntary alcohol consumption ++ = very sensitive to behavioral depression; high levels of voluntary alcohol consumption
0 = no sensitivity to behavioral depression; no voluntary alcohol consumption − = not tested