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      Investigating causality between liability to ADHD and substance use, and liability to substance use and ADHD risk, using Mendelian randomization

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      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=O105151581

      • 저자
      • 발행기관
      • 학술지명
      • 권호사항
      • 발행연도

        2021년

      • 작성언어

        eng

      • Print ISSN

        1355-6215

      • Online ISSN

        1369-1600

      • 등재정보

        SCIE;SCOPUS

      • 자료형태

        학술저널

      • 원정보자원

        Addiction biology

      • 수록면

        n/a-n   [※수록면이 p5 이하이면, Review, Columns, Editor's Note, Abstract 등일 경우가 있습니다.]

      • 구독기관
        • 전북대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 성균관대학교 중앙학술정보관  
        • 부산대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 전남대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 제주대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 중앙대학교 서울캠퍼스 중앙도서관  
        • 인천대학교 학산도서관  
        • 숙명여자대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 서강대학교 로욜라중앙도서관  
        • 계명대학교 동산도서관  
        • 충남대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 한양대학교 백남학술정보관  
        • 이화여자대학교 중앙도서관  
        • 고려대학교 도서관  
      • ⓒ COPYRIGHT THE BRITISH LIBRARY BOARD: ALL RIGHT RESERVED
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      다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract)

      Attention‐deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has consistently been associated with substance use, but the nature of this association is not fully understood. To inform intervention development and public health messages, a vital question is wheth...

      Attention‐deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has consistently been associated with substance use, but the nature of this association is not fully understood. To inform intervention development and public health messages, a vital question is whether there are causal pathways from ADHD to substance use and/or vice versa. We applied bidirectional Mendelian randomization, using summary‐level data from the largest available genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) on ADHD, smoking (initiation, cigarettes per day, cessation, and a compound measure of lifetime smoking), alcohol use (drinks per week, alcohol problems, and alcohol dependence), cannabis use (initiation), and coffee consumption (cups per day). Genetic variants robustly associated with the “exposure” were selected as instruments and identified in the “outcome” GWAS. Effect estimates from individual genetic variants were combined with inverse‐variance weighted regression and five sensitivity analyses (weighted median, weighted mode, MR‐Egger, generalized summary data–based MR, and Steiger filtering). We found evidence that liability to ADHD increases likelihood of smoking initiation and heaviness of smoking among smokers, decreases likelihood of smoking cessation, and increases likelihood of cannabis initiation. There was weak evidence that liability to ADHD increases alcohol dependence risk but not drinks per week or alcohol problems. In the other direction, there was weak evidence that smoking initiation increases ADHD risk, but follow‐up analyses suggested a high probability of horizontal pleiotropy. There was no clear evidence of causal pathways between ADHD and coffee consumption. Our findings corroborate epidemiological evidence, suggesting causal pathways from liability to ADHD to smoking, cannabis use, and, tentatively, alcohol dependence. Further work is needed to explore the exact mechanisms mediating these causal effects.
      We applied bidirectional Mendelian randomization (see Figure) to summary‐level data from the largest available genome‐wide association studies on ADHD, smoking, alcohol use, cannabis use and coffee consumption, to investigate whether there are causal pathways from ADHD to substance use and/or vice versa. We found evidence that liability to ADHD increases likelihood of smoking and cannabis initiation and heaviness of smoking, and decreases likelihood of smoking cessation, as well as weak evidence that liability to ADHD increases alcohol dependence risk

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