Childhood adversity, monoamine oxidase a genotype, and risk for conduct disorder.

Arch Gen Psychiatry

Department of Human Genetics, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virgoinia Commonwaelth University, Richmond, 23298-0003, USA.

Published: July 2004

Background: Very little is known about how different sets of risk factors interact to influence risk for psychiatric disorder.

Objective: To replicate a recent report of a genotype-environment interaction that predicts risk for antisocial behavior in boys.

Design: Characterizing risk for conduct disorder in boys in association with monoamine oxidase A genotype and exposure to familial adversity, defined by interparental violence, parental neglect, and inconsistent discipline.

Setting: A community-based sample of twin boys.

Participants: Five hundred fourteen male twins aged 8 to 17 years.

Main Outcome Measure: Conduct disorder.

Results: There was a main effect of adversity but not of monoamine oxidase A on risk for conduct disorder. Low monoamine oxidase A activity increased risk for conduct disorder only in the presence of an adverse childhood environment. Neither a passive nor an evocative genotype-environment correlation accounted for the interaction.

Conclusion: This study replicates a recent report of a genotype-environment interaction that predicts individual variation in risk for antisocial behavior in boys.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.61.7.738DOI Listing

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