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Original Article |

Familial Influences on Conduct Disorder Reflect 2 Genetic Factors and 1 Shared Environmental Factor

Kenneth S. Kendler, MD; Steven H. Aggen, PhD; Christopher J. Patrick, PhD
JAMA Psychiatry. 2013;70(1):78-86. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.267.
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Context  Prior studies suggest that antisocial behavior in childhood and adolescence reflects multiple symptomatic dimensions. However, to our knowledge, no prior study has evaluated the underlying nature of the etiologic influences contributing to conduct disorder (CD) symptoms as defined in the DSM.

Objective  To determine the structure of genetic and environmental risk factors for CD.

Design  Population-based twin registry.

Setting  Virginia.

Participants  Two thousand seven hundred sixty-nine members of male-male twin pairs from the Virginia Adult Twin Study of Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorders.

Main Outcome Measure  Retrospective self-reported symptoms of CD.

Results  The best-fitting multivariate twin model included 2 genetic factors, 1 shared environmental common factor, and 1 nonshared environmental common factor, along with criterion-specific genetic and nonshared environmental effects. The CD criteria with the strongest loadings on the 2 genetic factors were, respectively, those reflecting rule breaking (eg, playing hooky) and overt aggressive acts (eg, hurting people). The shared environmental common factor had salient loadings on a distinct set of criteria reflecting covert delinquent acts (eg, stealing and hurting animals). Loadings on the single nonshared environmental common factor were more uniform and less selective. Scores on the 3 familial CD factors were differentially associated with a range of personality, psychopathology, and demographic factors.

Conclusions  From a genetic perspective, the DSM criteria for CD do not reflect a single dimension of liability. The familial risk to CD is composed of 2 discrete dimensions of genetic risk, reflecting rule breaking and overt aggression, and 1 dimension of shared environmental risk, reflecting covert delinquency. These 3 familial factors differ meaningfully in their association with a range of relevant validators.

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Figures

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Grahic Jump Location

Figure. Genetic and shared and nonshared environmental parameter estimates from the best-fitting model (model 8) for the DSM-III-R A criteria for conduct disorder. A, Genetic parameter estimates. Two of the 13 DSM-III-R criteria (robbed or mugged someone and forced sex) were omitted from analyses because of low observed or expected prevalence, and 2 others (broken into house, building, or car and stolen without confrontation) were combined into a single item. For common factors, paths +0.30 or more are bolded. To calculate the proportion of variance in liability of a criterion that is estimated to be accounted for by the genetic or environmental factors, the path coefficient needs to be squared. B, Shared and nonshared environmental parameter estimates. For common factors, paths +0.30 or more are bolded.

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Country-Specific Mortality and Growth Failure in Infancy and Yound Children and Association With Material Stature

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