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The differential impact of risk factors on illicit drug involvement in females
Authors:Arpana Agrawal  Charles O Gardner  Carol A Prescott  Kenneth S Kendler
Institution:(1) Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Dept. of Human Genetics, Richmond (VA), USA;(2) Washington University, School of Medicine, Dept. of Psychiatry, 40 N.Kingshighway, #Ste 2, St. Louis (MO) 63108, USA;(3) Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Dept. of Psychiatry, Richmond (VA), USA
Abstract:AbstractBackground Initiation of drug use and progression to abuse/dependence involve complex pathways. Potential risk factors may correlate with initiation or progression or both. Are there risk factors that associate with illicit drug use or illicit drug abuse/dependence? Is the magnitude of the association the same for use and abuse/dependence? Does this pattern of association differ across categories of drugs?Methods We used data from female-female adult twins to assess the association of 26 putative risk factors with use and abuse/dependence of six illicit psychoactive drugs. Drug involvement was represented by independent dichotomous outcomes and by a single ordinal variable. Odds ratios were obtained by logistic regression and a continuation ratio was used to test the magnitude of association.Results Factors associate in similar patterns with different drug categories. Some associated factors interact only with initiation while others relate with both stages. There is a stronger association of significant socio-demographic factors with drug use while the psychiatric diagnoses are more strongly associated with progression to abuse/dependence.Conclusions Risk factors may be use-specific, abuse/dependence-specific or common to use and abuse/dependence. The trend of associations is similar across different illicit drugs. This suggests complex, interacting pathways that determine drug habits in individuals. These results are hypothesis-generating and future studies of causal relationships may draw from the outcomes presented in these analyses.
Keywords:illicit drugs  use  abuse/dependence  risk factors  continuation ratio
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