| Literature DB >> 26199714 |
Mark J Taylor1, Elise B Robinson2, Francesca Happé3, Patrick Bolton4, Daniel Freeman5, Angelica Ronald1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This twin study investigated whether autistic traits during childhood were associated with adolescent psychotic experiences.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Comorbidity; Genetics; Psychotic experiences; Twin study
Year: 2015 PMID: 26199714 PMCID: PMC4509468 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-015-0037-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Interpretation of twin correlations
| Component | Cross-twin correlation | Cross-trait cross-twin correlation |
|---|---|---|
| Additive genetic (A) | MZ correlation is higher than the DZ correlation | MZ correlation is higher than the DZ correlation |
| Shared environmental (C) | DZ correlation is greater than half the MZ correlation | DZ correlation is greater than half the MZ correlation |
| Nonshared environmental (E) | MZ correlation is lower than 1 | MZ correlation is lower than the phenotypic correlation |
Cross-twin correlation: correlation of one twin’s score on a trait with their co-twin’s score on the same trait; cross-trait cross-twin correlation: correlation of one twin’s score on a trait with their co-twin’s score on another
MZ monozygotic twins, DZ dizygotic twins
Fig. 1Path diagram of the Cholesky decomposition. Variables enclosed in circles are latent variables. The red arrows connecting A1–A4, C1–C4, and E1–E4 to SPEQ age 16 represent the sources of shared variance between autistic traits and SPEQ subscale scores. The blue arrows, which connect A5, C5, and E5 to SPEQ age 16, represent the residual variance in SPEQ subscales scores. The black arrows represent the paths between autistic traits at each age. CAST Childhood Autism Spectrum Test, AQ Autism Spectrum Quotient, SPEQ Specific Psychotic Experiences Questionnaire, A additive genetic influences, C shared environmental influences, E nonshared environmental influences
Sample size, descriptive statistics, and phenotypic correlations
| Sample sizes | ||||||
| Age |
| MZM | DZM | MZF | DZF | DZOS |
| 8 years | 13,941 | 858 | 804 | 1046 | 874 | 1659 |
| 12 years | 8438 | 814 | 775 | 1050 | 895 | 1601 |
| 14 years | 11,118 | 529 | 463 | 662 | 548 | 911 |
| 16 years | 10,874 | 738 | 686 | 1043 | 905 | 1560 |
| Measure descriptive statistics | ||||||
| Measure | Cronbach’s | Possible range of scores |
| Skew | ||
| CAST age 8 | 0.71 | 0–31 | 4.85 (3.09) | 0.99 (−0.64) | ||
| CAST age 12 | 0.73 | 0–30 | 4.62 (3.15) | 1.24 (−0.48) | ||
| AQ age 14 | 0.80 | 0–87 | 36.78 (12.16) | 0.24 (0.21) | ||
| AQ age 16 | 0.80 | 0–80 | 24.04 (10.62) | 0.39 (0.36) | ||
| SPEQ paranoia | 0.93 | 0–72 | 12.17 (10.62) | 1.56 (−0.61) | ||
| SPEQ hallucinations | 0.88 | 0–45 | 4.66 (6.01) | 2.08 (0.22) | ||
| SPEQ cognitive disorganisation | 0.77 | 0–11 | 3.96 (2.85) | 0.44 (−0.63) | ||
| SPEQ grandiosity | 0.86 | 0–24 | 5.32 (4.43) | 1.19 (−0.41) | ||
| SPEQ anhedonia | 0.78 | 0–50 | 16.36 (7.93) | 1.14 (0.17) | ||
| SPEQ negative symptoms | 0.86 | 0–27 | 2.63 (3.63) | 2.32 (0.45) | ||
| Phenotypic correlations | ||||||
| Autistic traits age 8 | Autistic traits age 12 | Autistic traits age 14 | Autistic traits age 16 | |||
| Paranoia | .02 (ns) | .06* | .07** | .10** | ||
| Hallucinations | .07** | .10** | .13** | .14** | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | .08** | .12** | .17** | .21** | ||
| Grandiosity | .04* | .08** | .04 (ns) | .00 (ns) | ||
| Anhedonia | .14** | .18** | .24** | .30** | ||
| Negative symptoms | .27** | .32** | .40** | .47** | ||
All means are given for untransformed scores; skew values are shown for the untransformed measures, and then the standardised residuals used in analyses in parentheses. All Ns are number of twin pairs with data available at each age
SPEQ Specific Psychotic Experiences Questionnaire, CAST Childhood Autism Spectrum Test, AQ Autism Spectrum Quotient, ns nonsignificant
*p < .05; **p < .01
Twin correlations
| Cross-twin correlations | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MZM | DZM | MZF | DZF | DZOS | ||||||
| Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | |
| Autistic traits age 8 | .83 | .81/.85 | .37 | .35/.39 | .79 | .76/.82 | .45 | .40/.49 | .48 | .44/.49 |
| Autistic traits age 12 | .79 | .77/.82 | .32 | .29/.35 | .76 | .73/.79 | .51 | .47/.55 | .41 | .38/.45 |
| Autistic traits age 14 | .91 | .88/.93 | .54 | .51/.56 | .88 | .85/.89 | .62 | .60/.66 | .51 | .47/.55 |
| Autistic traits age 16 | .92 | .90/.95 | .51 | .48/.55 | .82 | .80/.87 | .58 | .55/.61 | .46 | .44/.50 |
| Anhedonia | .37 | .31/.39 | .19 | .18/.22 | .45 | .42/.46 | .17 | .13/.19 | .14 | .12/.15 |
| Negative symptoms | .80 | .78/.82 | .59 | .55/.60 | .81 | .78/.82 | .52 | .47/.54 | .47 | .44/.48 |
| Cross-trait cross-twin correlations | ||||||||||
| MZM | DZM | MZF | DZF | DZOS | ||||||
| Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | Estimate | 95 % CI | |
| Autistic traits age 8—anhedonia | .18 | .15/.22 | .07 | .03/.10 | .22 | .19/.23 | .03 | .01/.05 | .08 | .05/.09 |
| Autistic traits age 12—anhedonia | .20 | .17/.23 | .00 | −.05/.04 | .23 | .19/.26 | .07 | .03/.09 | .11 | .05/.13 |
| Autistic traits age 14—anhedonia | .24 | .15/.27 | .16 | .09/.20 | .32 | .21/.34 | .12 | .08/.15 | .14 | .04/.17 |
| Autistic traits age 16—anhedonia | .28 | .24/.29 | .15 | .09/.17 | .31 | .29/.33 | .11 | .06/.12 | .11 | .09/.13 |
| Autistic traits age 8—negative symptoms | .22 | .19/.23 | .18 | .15/.19 | .24 | .21/.25 | .19 | .15/.22 | .20 | .18/.22 |
| Autistic traits age 12—negative symptoms | .34 | .31/.35 | .24 | .22/.25 | .29 | .27/.31 | .19 | .17/.22 | .19 | .15/.22 |
| Autistic traits age 14—negative symptoms | .37 | .31/.44 | .30 | .22/.36 | .32 | .23/.36 | .25 | .18/.29 | .24 | .21/.27 |
| Autistic traits age 16—negative symptoms | .43 | .42/.45 | .31 | .29/.34 | .36 | .34/.38 | .30 | .28/.36 | .21 | .19/.23 |
MZM monozygotic male, DZM dizygotic male, MZF monozygotic female, DZF dizygotic female, DZOS dizygotic opposite sex
Twin-model fit statistics and parameter estimates
| Comparative fit with saturated model | Comparative fit with full ACE Cholesky | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model | −2LL | df | Par. | BIC | Δ | Δdf |
| AIC | Δ | Δdf |
| AIC | |||
| Autistic traits and anhedonia (five-variable decompositions) | |||||||||||||||
| Saturated | 63,287.21 | 27,375 | 260 | −158948.70 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |||
| ACE sex diff. | 63,489.32 | 27,535 | 100 | −160045.50 | 202.11 | 160 | <.05 | −117.89 | – | – | – | – | |||
| ACE const. a | 63,619.71 | 27,580 | 55 | −160280.40 | 332.50 | 205 | <.001 | −77.50 | 130.39 | 45 | <.001 | 40.39 | |||
| AE const. | 63,784.42 | 27,595 | 40 | −160237.50 | 497.20 | 220 | <.001 | 57.20 | 164.71 | 15 | <.001 | 134.71 | |||
| CE const. | 64,974.16 | 27,595 | 40 | −159047.80 | 1686.94 | 220 | <.001 | 1246.94 | 1345.45 | 15 | <.001 | 1324.45 | |||
| E const. | 71,621.98 | 27,610 | 25 | −152521.80 | 8334.77 | 235 | <.001 | 7864.77 | 8002.27 | 30 | <.001 | 7942.27 | |||
| Autistic traits and parent-rated negative symptoms (five-variable decompositions) | |||||||||||||||
| Saturated | 60,014.32 | 27,393 | 260 | −162367.70 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | |||
| ACE sex diff. | 60,189.54 | 27,553 | 100 | −163491.40 | 175.22 | 160 | .19 | −144.78 | – | – | – | – | |||
| ACE const. a | 60,319.68 | 27,598 | 55 | −163726.60 | 305.35 | 205 | <.001 | −104.65 | 130.13 | 45 | <.001 | 40.13 | |||
| AE | 60,542.65 | 27,613 | 40 | −163625.40 | 528.33 | 220 | <.001 | −7.02 | 222.98 | 15 | <.001 | 192.98 | |||
| CE | 61,994.75 | 27,613 | 40 | −162173.31 | 1980.42 | 220 | <.001 | 1540.42 | 1675.07 | 15 | <.001 | 1645.07 | |||
| E | 70,414.98 | 27,628 | 25 | −153874.80 | 10400.66 | 235 | <.001 | 9930.66 | 10095.31 | 30 | <.001 | 10035.31 | |||
| Parameter estimates from best-fitting decompositions | |||||||||||||||
| Autistic traits age 8 | Autistic traits age 12 | Autistic traits age 14 | Autistic traits age 16 | Variance specific to psychotic experiences | |||||||||||
| A1 | C1 | E1 | A2 | C2 | E2 | A3 | C3 | E3 | A4 | C4 | E4 | A5 | C5 | E5 | |
| Anhedonia | .02 (.00/.05) | .01 (.00/.05) | .00 (−.01/.01) | .00 (.00/.03) | .01 (.00/.04) | .00 (−.01/.01) | .02 (.00/.05) | .01 (.00/.04) | .00 (.00/.01) | .01 (.00/.05) | .00 (−.01/.03) | .02 (.00/.03) | .32 (.26/.36) | .00 (−.05/.06) | .58 (.55/.61) |
| Total | .03 | .01 | .03 | .03 | .90 | ||||||||||
| Neg sym | .02 (.00/.04) | .10 (.04/.22) | .00 (.00/.01) | .01 (.00/.03) | .06 (.01/.17) | .00 (.00/.01) | .05 (.03/.10) | .00 (−.01/.01) | .01 (.00/.01) | .04 (.01/.07) | .00 (−.02/.02) | .02 (.01/.03) | .45 (.40/.50) | .10 (−.18/.18) | .14 (.13/.15) |
| Total | .12 | .07 | .06 | .06 | .69 | ||||||||||
AE, CE, and E models are submodels within the ACE model that fit best. A1–A4, C1–C4, and E1–E4 are the paths shown in red in Fig. 1, and represent the influence of genetic and environmental causes of autistic traits on psychotic experiences, A5, C5, and E5 are residual pathways (shown in blue in Fig. 1), which represent the genetic and environmental influences on psychotic experiences that are independent of autistic traits
Saturated saturated model of means and covariance, ACE sex diff. full ACE Cholesky decomposition, which included quantitative sex differences for all parameters, ACE const. constrained ACE Cholesky decomposition, with parameters fixed to be equal across sexes, −2LL fit statistic, df degrees of freedom, Par. parameters, AIC Akaike’s Information Criteria, BIC Bayesian Information Criteria, A additive genetic influences, C shared environmental influences, E nonshared environmental influences
aIndicates best-fitting model
Fig. 2Mean standardised scores on the SPEQ subscales for participants with ASC. Error bars represent 95 % confidence intervals; all means are given as mean standardised residual scores. SPEQ Specific Psychotic Experiences Questionnaire