Literature DB >> 32227601

Association between family history of suicide attempt and neurocognitive functioning in community youth.

Jason D Jones1, Rhonda C Boyd1,2, Monica E Calkins2, Tyler M Moore2, Annisa Ahmed1, Ran Barzilay1,2, Tami D Benton1,2, Raquel E Gur1,2, Ruben C Gur2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Suicidal behavior is highly familial. Neurocognitive deficits have been proposed as an endophenotype for suicide risk that may contribute to the familial transmission of suicide. Yet, there is a lack of research on the neurocognitive functioning of first-degree biological relatives of suicide attempters. The aim of the present study is to conduct the largest investigation to date of neurocognitive functioning in community youth with a family history of a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt (FH).
METHODS: Participants aged 8-21 years from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort completed detailed clinical and neurocognitive evaluations. A subsample of 501 participants with a FH was matched to a comparison group of 3,006 participants without a family history of suicide attempt (no-FH) on age, sex, race, and lifetime depression.
RESULTS: After adjusting for multiple comparisons and including relevant clinical and demographic covariates, youth with a FH had significantly lower executive function factor scores (F[1,3432] = 6.63, p = .010) and performed worse on individual tests of attention (F[1,3382] = 7.08, p = .008) and language reasoning (F[1,3387] = 5.12, p = .024) than no-FH youth.
CONCLUSIONS: Youth with a FH show small differences in executive function, attention, and language reasoning compared to youth without a FH. Further research is warranted to investigate neurocognitive functioning as an endophenotype for suicide risk. Implications for the prevention and treatment of suicidal behaviors are discussed.
© 2020 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Family history; cognition; endophenotype; suicide

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32227601      PMCID: PMC7529718          DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13239

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0021-9630            Impact factor:   8.982


  41 in total

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