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BackgroundMajor depression (MD) and anxiety disorders such as panic disorder (PD), agoraphobia (AG), and social phobia (SP) are heritable and highly co-morbid. However, the relative importance of genetic and environmental etiology of the covariation between these disorders, particularly the relationship between PD and AG, is less clear.MethodsThis study measured MD, PD, and AG in a population sample of 5,440 twin pairs and 1,245 single twins, about 45% of whom were also scored for SP. Prevalences, within individual co-morbidity and twin odds ratios for co-morbidity, are reported. A behavioral genetic analysis of the four disorders using the classical twin design was conducted.ResultsOdds ratios for MD, PD, AG, and SP in twins of individuals diagnosed with one of the four disorders were increased. Heritability estimates under a threshold-liability model for MD, PD, AG, and SP respectively were .33 (CI: 0.30-0.42), .38 (CI: 0.24-0.55), .48 (CI: 0.37-0.65), and .39 (CI: 0.16-0.65), with no evidence for any variance explained by the common environment shared by twins. We find that a common genetic factor explains a moderate proportion of variance in these four disorders. The genetic correlation between PD and AG was .83.ConclusionMD, PD, AG, and SP strongly co-aggregate within families and common genetic factors explain a moderate proportion of variance in these four disorders. The high genetic correlation between PD and AG and the increased odds ratio for PD and AG in siblings of those with AG without PD suggests a common genetic etiology for PD and AG.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/da.20611

Type

Journal article

Journal

Depression and anxiety

Publication Date

01/2009

Volume

26

Pages

1004 - 1011

Addresses

Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane, QLD 4029, Australia. miriam.mosing@qimr.edu.au

Keywords

Humans, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Diseases in Twins, Multivariate Analysis, Agoraphobia, Panic Disorder, Phobic Disorders, Depressive Disorder, Major, Interview, Psychological, Comorbidity, Phenotype, Models, Genetic, Social Environment, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Queensland, Female, Male, Statistics as Topic, Genome-Wide Association Study, Young Adult