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Conduct disorder - a comprehensive exploration of comorbidity patterns, genetic and environmental risk factors.

Natalia TesliPiotr JaholkowskiUnn K HaukvikAndreas JangmoMarit HaramJaroslav RokickiChristine FriestadJorim J TielbeekØyvind NæssTorbjørn SkardhamarKristin GustavsonHelga AskSeena FazelMartin TesliOle A Andreassen
Published in: Psychiatry research (2023)
Conduct disorder (CD), a common mental disorder in children and adolescents, is characterized by antisocial behavior. Despite similarities with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) and possible diagnostic continuity, CD has been shown to precede a range of adult-onset mental disorders. Additionally, little is known about the putative shared genetic liability between CD and adult-onset mental disorders and the underlying gene-environment interplay. Here, we interrogated comorbidity between CD and other mental disorders from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (n = 114 500) and investigated how polygenic risk scores (PRS) for mental health traits were associated with CD/CD traits in childhood and adolescence. Gene-environment interplay patterns for CD was explored with data on bullying and parental education. We found CD to be comorbid with several child and adult-onset mental disorders. This phenotypic overlap corresponded with associations between PRS for mental disorders and CD. Additionally, our findings support an additive gene-environment model. Previously conceptualized as a precursor of ASPD, we found that CD was associated with polygenic risk for several child- and adult-onset mental disorders. High comorbidity of CD with other psychiatric disorders reflected on the genetic level should inform research studies, diagnostic assessments and clinical follow-up of this heterogenous group.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • genome wide
  • risk factors
  • nk cells
  • healthcare
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • machine learning
  • risk assessment
  • high resolution
  • data analysis