Psychiatric Diagnoses in Parents and Psychiatric, Behavioral, and Psychosocial Outcomes in Their Offspring: A Swedish Population-Based Register Study.

IF 15.1 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY American Journal of Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1176/appi.ajp.20230353
Mengping Zhou, Christine Takami Lageborn, Arvid Sjölander, Henrik Larsson, Brian D'Onofrio, Mikael Landén, Paul Lichtenstein, Erik Pettersson
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Abstract

Objective: Associations were examined between six psychiatric diagnoses in parents and a broad range of psychiatric and nonpsychiatric outcomes in their offspring.

Methods: All individuals born in Sweden between 1970 and 2000 were linked to their biological parents (N=3,286,293) through Swedish national registers. A matched cohort design, with stratified Cox regression and conditional logistic regression analyses, was used examine associations between six psychiatric diagnoses in the parents and 32 outcomes in their offspring. All children, including those exposed and those not exposed to parents with psychiatric diagnoses, were followed from their date of birth to the date of emigration from Sweden, death, or December 31, 2013, when the offspring were 14-44 years old.

Results: In terms of absolute risk, most children who had parents with psychiatric diagnoses were not diagnosed in specialist care themselves, and the proportion of offspring having any of the 16 types of psychiatric conditions ranged from 22.17% (of offspring exposed to parental depression) to 25.05% (of offspring exposed to parental drug-related disorder) at the end of follow-up. Nevertheless, in terms of relative risk, exposure to any of the six parental psychiatric diagnoses increased probabilities of the 32 outcomes among the offspring, with hazard ratios that ranged from 1.03 to 8.46 for time-to-event outcomes and odds ratios that ranged from 1.29 to 3.36 for binary outcomes. Some specificities were observed for parental diagnoses of psychosis and substance-related disorders, which more strongly predicted psychotic-like and externalizing-related outcomes, respectively, in the offspring.

Conclusions: The intergenerational transmission of parental psychiatric conditions appeared largely transdiagnostic and extended to nonpsychiatric outcomes in offspring. Given the broad spectrum of associations with the outcomes, service providers (e.g., psychiatrists, teachers, and social workers) should consider clients' broader psychiatric family history when predicting prognosis and planning interventions or treatment.

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父母的精神病诊断及其后代的精神、行为和心理社会结果:瑞典人口登记研究》。
目的研究父母的六项精神病诊断与其后代的一系列精神病和非精神病结果之间的关联:通过瑞典国家登记册,将 1970 年至 2000 年间在瑞典出生的所有个体与其亲生父母(N=3,286,293)联系起来。采用匹配队列设计、分层 Cox 回归和条件 Logistic 回归分析,研究了父母的六项精神病诊断与其后代的 32 项结果之间的关联。对所有儿童(包括父母有精神病诊断的儿童和父母没有精神病诊断的儿童)从出生日期到移居瑞典日期、死亡日期或 2013 年 12 月 31 日(后代年龄为 14-44 岁)进行了跟踪调查:就绝对风险而言,大多数父母患有精神疾病的儿童本身并未在专科医疗机构确诊,在随访结束时,后代患有16种精神疾病中任何一种的比例从22.17%(父母患有抑郁症的后代)到25.05%(父母患有毒品相关疾病的后代)不等。然而,就相对风险而言,父母六种精神病诊断中的任何一种都会增加后代出现 32 种结果的概率,时间到事件结果的危险比从 1.03 到 8.46 不等,二元结果的几率比从 1.29 到 3.36 不等。父母对精神病和药物相关障碍的诊断具有一定的特异性,分别对后代的精神病样结果和外显相关结果具有更强的预测作用:结论:父母精神疾病的代际传递在很大程度上是跨诊断的,并延伸到后代的非精神疾病结果。鉴于与这些结果的关联范围很广,服务提供者(如精神科医生、教师和社会工作者)在预测预后和计划干预或治疗时,应考虑客户更广泛的精神病家族史。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
22.30
自引率
2.80%
发文量
157
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Psychiatry, dedicated to keeping psychiatry vibrant and relevant, publishes the latest advances in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness. The journal covers the full spectrum of issues related to mental health diagnoses and treatment, presenting original articles on new developments in diagnosis, treatment, neuroscience, and patient populations.
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