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P3 Event-Related Potential Amplitude and the Risk for Disinhibitory Behavior Disorders

P3 Event-Related Potential Amplitude and the Risk for Disinhibitory Behavior Disorders. W.G. Iacono University of Minnesota. Co-Contributors. Scott Carlson Irene Elkins Robert Krueger Steve Malone Matt McGue (& many others). Supported by NIDA & NIAAA. Theme of this Address.

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P3 Event-Related Potential Amplitude and the Risk for Disinhibitory Behavior Disorders

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  1. P3 Event-Related Potential Amplitude and the Risk for Disinhibitory Behavior Disorders W.G. Iacono University of Minnesota

  2. Co-Contributors Scott Carlson Irene Elkins Robert Krueger Steve Malone Matt McGue (& many others) Supported by NIDA & NIAAA

  3. Theme of this Address • Behavioral disinhibition is expressed through a spectrum of related psychiatric disorders, personality traits, and undersocialized behaviors with a common etiology • Genetically influenced CNS diathesis underlies this spectrum • Reduced P3 event-related potential amplitude indexes the genetic diathesis

  4. Undersocialized-Disinhibited Behaviors • Precocious (before age 15): • Cigarette use • Alcohol use • Police contact • Drug use • Sexual intercourse

  5. Externalizing Disorders • Childhood • Attention deficit disorder (ADHD) • Oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) • Conduct disorder (CD) • Adulthood • Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) • Conduct disorder • Adult antisocial behavior (AAB) • Substance Use Disorders • Nicotine dependence • Alcohol abuse and dependence • Illicit drug abuse and dependence

  6. MTFS Participant Description • MN statewide sample of twins identified from birth records -17% refuse • Day-long assessment at intake & at three-year follow-up intervals • 17 Year Old Intake (N=1,252) N=578 boys NMZ= 411 pairs N=674 girls MDZ= 215 pairs

  7. Results: Organized to Address Two Questions • Are these externalizing disorders etiologically distinct with specific behavioral & psychophysiological risk indicators? or • Are the disorders part of a spectrum in which risk is nonspecific, with each indicator conferring a general increase in risk distributed across all of the disorders?

  8. Are different types of early onset problem behavior risk indicators for specific disorders or for externalizing generally?

  9. Early Problem Behavior Index(Score ranges from 0 to 5) • Count of the following before age 15: • Smoked • Tried alcohol without parental permission • Had contact with police • Used illicit drugs • Had sexual intercourse • Behaviors occur together (average tetra-choric correlation = .59) McGue & Iacono, Submitted

  10. Prevalence of Problem Behavior Before Age 15

  11. Probability of age-20 diagnosis as a function of the number of early problem behaviors: Male Percent Early Behaviors McGue & Iacono, Submitted

  12. Probability of age-20 diagnosis as a function of the number of early problem behaviors: Female Percent Early Behaviors McGue & Iacono, Submitted

  13. Relationship between Early Problem Behavior and Age 20 Externalizing McGue & Iacono, Submitted

  14. Krueger et al. (2002) • Proposed a hierarchical model consisting of: • Generalized externalizing factor • Specific factors that account for distinctions among disorders • Model derived from 17-year old twin data

  15. Factor Loadings of Externalizing Indicators Externalizing (Disinhibitory) Psychopathology Krueger et al. (2002) .47 .78 .58 .71 .63 Adolescent/ Adult Antisocial Conduct Disorder Alcohol Dependence Drug Dependence (Low) Constraint

  16. Genetic and Environmental Contributions to Externalizing Krueger et al. (2002) Non-heritable (19%) Heritable (81%) Externalizing Psychopathology Adolescent/ Adult Antisocial Conduct Disorder Alcohol Dependence Drug Dependence (Low) Constraint E C & E E E A & E Specific Genetic (A) and Environmental Factors (C&E)

  17. Do SUD parents tend to have children with SUDs or children with a full range of externalizing disorder? Question asked separately for: • Alcohol dependent parents controlling for parental drug dependence • Drug dependent parents controlling for alcohol dependence

  18. Parental Substance Abuse Predicts Offspring Disorders

  19. Background: P3 Amplitude • Reduced P3 amplitude is associated with alcoholism risk(Begleiter et al., '84; Polich et al., '94; Hill et al., ’99; Iacono et al.,’02) • Putative endophenotype • Individual differences in P3 amplitude are heritable(e.g., van Beijsterveldt et al., ’01; Katsanis et al., 1997: h2=.79) • Reduced P3 amplitude is observed in other externalizing disorders • Smoking (Anokhin et al., '00; Carlson et al., ‘98) • Drug abuse (e.g., Biggins et al., '97; Branchey et al., '93; Carlson et al., ‘98) • CD/ASPD (e.g., Bauer et al., '94, '99; Carlson et al., ‘98)

  20. Rotating Heads Task of Begleiter et al. (1984) Normal Rotated Left Right No Response 160 Trials 80 Trials

  21. Pz P3 P4

  22. Reduced P3 Is Associated with High Externalizing

  23. Is P3 amplitude reduction associated with early problem behaviors?

  24. Iacono & McGue, Submitted

  25. P3 Amplitude Reduction and Externalizing Disorders Each of the following two slides plots amplitude reduction effect sizes associated with externalizing: • Separately for boys and girls • Separately for "pure" and comorbid groups • Using a comparison group composed of adolescents with no externalizing disorder or affected father

  26. Comorbid = Indicated disorder+all others Pure = Indicated disorder only

  27. Comorbid = Indicated disorder+all others Pure = Indicated disorder only

  28. P3 Amplitude Reduction and Paternal Risk The following slide plots amplitude reduction effect sizes associated with paternal risk: • Separately for all children and those without a substance use disorder at 17

  29. All = May have substance abuse Without SA = Free of substance abuse

  30. Do those who develop substance abuse for the first time at age 20 have reduced P3 at age 17? • Examine P3 amplitude at age 17 for all new cases at 20, new cases that were free of externalizing disorder at 17, and new cases with no affected father • Comparison group now excludes new cases developing between 17-20

  31. Iacono et al., 2002 All = all offspring No Ext = no ext. dx at intake Low risk = no paternal dx

  32. (Especially) Low risk control participants who developed a substance use disorder at age 20 (N=19) had smaller P3 at age 17 compared to controls who did not (N=44) t(61)=2.81, p<.01)

  33. Summary and Conclusions • Different types of problem behavior present before age 15 are nonspecific indicators of risk for externalizing disorders at age 20 • Different types of parental SUD confer nonspecific familial risk for offspring externalizing • Externalizing disorders load strongly on a latent externalizing factor that is highly heritable • P3 findings support the existence of a shared genetic vulnerability for behavioral disinhibition, specifically:

  34. P3 Amplitude Summary • Reduced P3 is associated with precocious expression of problem behavior • Reduced P3 is associated with all externalizing disorders, even in “pure” non-comorbid cases • Reduced P3-amplitude identifies spectrum risk: • Those with small P3 express the full range of externalizing disorders • Children of affected fathers have reduced P3 • SUD developing at age 20 is associated with reduced P3 at 17

  35. The P3 Endophenotype • Reduced P3 is not an “alcoholism endophenotype” • Lack of specificity of P3 effect to different externalizing disorders is an etiologic clue, not a problem • Reduced P3 may be specific to genetic risk for externalizing E.g., although schizophrenia and depression associated with reduced P3 • Auditory, not visual P3 (Ford, '99) • State not trait (Mathalon et al., '00) • Familial specificity in externalizing • Carlson et al. poster • Nature of P3 effect requires additional research

  36. Thank you!

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