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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Genetic and Environmental Influences Underlying Externalizing Behaviors, Cigarette Smoking and Illicit Drug Use Across Adolescence

Antti LatvalaAntti LatvalaJaakko KaprioJaakko KaprioLea PulkkinenRichard J. RoseAnja C. HuizinkTellervo KorhonenDanielle M. Dick

subject

MaleympäristöAdolescentSubstance-Related DisordersDizygotic twinEnvironmentArticleDevelopmental psychologyCohort StudiesSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingcohort studiesCigarette smokingtupakointiGeneticsTwins Dizygoticlongitudinal studiesIllicit drugHumansLongitudinal StudiesProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyChildGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFinlandModels GeneticSmokingTwins MonozygoticHeritabilityHealth psychologyAdolescent BehaviorCohort/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/good_health_and_well_beingadolescenceFemalePsychologyDemographyCohort study

description

We investigated genetic and environmental influences common to adolescent externalizing behavior (at age 12), smoking (at age 14) and initiation of drug use (at age 17) using the FinnTwin12 cohort data. Multivariate Cholesky models were fit to data from 737 monozygotic and 722 dizygotic twin pairs. Heritability of externalizing behavior was 56%, that of smoking initiation/amount 20/32%, and initiation of drug use 27%. In the best-fitting model common environmental influences explained most of the covariance between externalizing behavior and smoking initiation (69%) and amount (77%). Covariance between smoking initiation/amount and drug use was due to additive genetic (42/22%) and common environmental (58/78%) influences. Half of the covariance between externalizing behavior and drug use was due to shared genetic and half due to the environments shared by co-twins. Using a longitudinal, prospective design, our results indicate that early observed externalizing behavior provides significant underlying genetic and environmental influences common to later substance use, here manifested as initiation of drug use in late adolescence. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012.

10.1007/s10519-012-9528-zhttps://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3597348/