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Heavy Consumption of Cigarettes, Alcohol, and Coffee in Male Twins
Gary E. Swan, Ph.D.
Dorit Carmelli, Ph.D.
Lon R. Cardon, Ph.D.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the relative contribution of environmental
and genetic
influences on the joint distribution of heavy smoking, heavy alcohol use,
and heavy coffee drinking.
METHOD: Multivariate structural equation modeling in a large cohort
of male twins (n =
2,220 monozygotic and 2,373 dizygotic twin pairs; mean age = 62.1 years)
from the
National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council's World War II Twin
Registry.
RESULTS: The best-fitting model identified two independent sets of
genetic and environmental latent factors, with one set underlying joint
heavy smoking and
heavy alcohol drinking and the other set underlying joint heavy smoking and
heavy coffee
drinking (chi-square = 14.13, 22 df, p > .80). Heavy alcohol drinking and heavy
coffee drinking
were uncorrelated in this sample. Although common genetic factors accounted
for 35% to
78% of the total genetic variance in heavy substance use, a substantial
amount of genetic
variance remained specific to each of the three substances.
CONCLUSIONS: Several hypotheses involving genetic and environmental factors are
presented to account for the independent clustering of heavy smoking and heavy alcohol
drinking and of heavy smoking and heavy coffee drinking.
This research was supported by grant AA08925 from NIAAA.
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