Literature DB >> 19207351

Pathways to cannabis abuse: a multi-stage model from cannabis availability, cannabis initiation and progression to abuse.

Nathan A Gillespie1, Michael C Neale, Kenneth S Kendler.   

Abstract

AIMS: Although previous twin studies have modeled the association between drug initiation and abuse, none has included the obvious risk factor of drug availability. Our aim is to determine whether the genetic and environmental risk factors for cannabis availability also generate variation in cannabis initiation and/or progression to DSM-IV symptoms of abuse.
DESIGN: We used multi-stage modeling, also known as causal-common-contingent (CCC) analysis, to partition the genetic and environmental factors into common and stage-specific components. PARTICIPANTS: This report is based on data collected from 1772 adult males from the Mid Atlantic Twin Registry. MEASUREMENTS: The twins participated in two structured interviews which included clinical and non-clinical measures of cannabis abuse as well as retrospective assessments of perceived cannabis availability between ages 8 and 25 years.
FINDINGS: Cannabis availability explained almost all the shared environmental risks in cannabis initiation and abuse. The influence of availability on the symptoms of abuse was indirect and mediated entirely by cannabis initiation.
CONCLUSION: These findings have begun to elucidate the causal processes underlying the liability to drug use and abuse in terms of putative risk factors. Specifically, our results show that the latent shared environmental factors in cannabis initiation and abuse can be explained by measured aspects of the shared environment--those responsible for variation in cannabis availability.

Entities:  

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19207351      PMCID: PMC2844887          DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2008.02456.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addiction        ISSN: 0965-2140            Impact factor:   6.526


  47 in total

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7.  A simple method for censored age-of-onset data subject to recall bias: mothers' reports of age of puberty in male twins.

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8.  Environmental and genetic influences on alcohol use in a volunteer sample of older twins.

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9.  Common genetic mechanisms in alcohol, drug, and mental disorder comorbidity.

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Review 10.  Statistical methods in genetic research on smoking.

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  52 in total

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Authors:  Michael T Lynskey; Arpana Agrawal; Andrew C Heath
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2.  Genetic variation in FAAH is associated with cannabis use disorders in a young adult sample of Mexican Americans.

Authors:  Whitney E Melroy-Greif; Kirk C Wilhelmsen; Cindy L Ehlers
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3.  The Genetic and Environmental Association Between Parental Monitoring and Risk of Cannabis, Stimulants, and Cocaine Initiation in a Sample of Male Twins: Does Parenting Matter?

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4.  Recent advances in the genetic epidemiology and molecular genetics of substance use disorders.

Authors:  Kenneth S Kendler; Xiangning Chen; Danielle Dick; Hermine Maes; Nathan Gillespie; Michael C Neale; Brien Riley
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5.  Genetic and Environmental Influences on Smoking Behavior across Adolescence and Young Adulthood in the Virginia Twin Study of Adolescent Behavioral Development and the Transitions to Substance Abuse Follow-Up.

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6.  Childhood predictors of first chance to use and use of cannabis by young adulthood.

Authors:  Carla L Storr; Fernando A Wagner; Chuan-Yu Chen; James C Anthony
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7.  Tobacco and cannabis use in college students are predicted by sex-dimorphic interactions between MAOA genotype and child abuse.

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8.  Natural course of cannabis use disorders.

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9.  Are genetic variants for tobacco smoking associated with cannabis involvement?

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10.  The association between speed of transition from initiation to subsequent use of cannabis and later problematic cannabis use, abuse and dependence.

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